From the Booker Prize winner and national bestselling author,
reflections on gardening, art, literature, and life
Penelope Lively takes up her key themes of time and memory, and her
lifelong passions for art, literature, and gardening in this
philosophical and poetic memoir. From the courtyards of her childhood
home in Cairo to a family cottage in Somerset, to her own gardens in
Oxford and London, Lively conducts an expert tour, taking us from Eden
to Sissinghurst and into her own backyard, traversing the lives of
writers like Virginia Woolf and Philip Larkin while imparting her own
sly and spare wisdom. Her body of work proves that certain themes never
go out of fashion, writes the New York Times Book Review, as true of
this beautiful volume as of the rest of the Lively canon.
Now in her eighty-fourth year, Lively muses, To garden is to elide past,
present, and future; it is a defiance of time.