The Ghost In The Garden
in search of Darwin’s lost garden
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Scribe Publications
Published:13th May '21
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- Paperback£9.99(9781914484193)
Exploring a forgotten garden, The Ghost in the Garden reveals the profound connections between memory, family, and Darwin's legacy in evolution.
In The Ghost in the Garden, the narrative unfolds in a forgotten garden that significantly influenced Charles Darwin's early life. This garden, located at his childhood home, The Mount in Shrewsbury, served as the backdrop for his initial explorations into the natural world. Guided by his mother and sisters, Darwin developed an early fascination with the reproductive life of flowers and conducted experiments that would later contribute to his groundbreaking theory of evolution. The garden was not just a physical space; it was a nurturing environment that shaped his scientific curiosity.
Fast forward a century and a half, we meet Jude Piesse, who finds herself living next to this historic site, now reduced to two overgrown acres amidst suburban development. With one child in her arms and another on the way, Jude embarks on a journey of discovery. As she strolls through the remnants of the garden, she reflects on the profound impact it had on Darwin and begins to uncover the rich tapestry of lives that once flourished there. The contrast between the past and present highlights how memory and legacy intertwine.
Blending biography, nature writing, and memoir, The Ghost in the Garden not only traces the origins of Darwin's ideas but also reveals the interconnectedness of nature, family, and history. Through Jude's exploration, the book invites readers to consider how the past continues to shape our understanding of the world around us.
‘[Q]uirky [and] gloriously unclassifiable … Ms. Piesse’s The Ghost in the Garden, with its many asides, intensely personal stories, and sometimes delightfully unrelated material … offers a radiant literary analogue for such botanical unpredictability.’
-- Christoph Irmscher * The Wall Street Journal *‘A fascinating and very personal book in which Darwin’s relationship to his family’s garden reflects directly on his visionary understanding of the natural world in its entirety. A delight!’
-- Julia Blackburn, author of Thin Paths‘Jude Piesse’s beautiful piece of detective work, The Ghost in the Garden, uncovers and brings to life the place that inspired the curiosity and spirit of enquiry of the boy and man who would become probably the most influential thinker and scientist in history: Charles Darwin. What makes this book so emotionally beguiling is the way the tale unfolds of an ordinary, yet handsome provincial house with a garden — and that was all it took. It moved me because inside Piesse’s book she could be describing every boy and girl free to roam and encouraged to explore, and you can feel the melancholy ghost of your own lost youth and heartbreak for those millions without the good fortune to have that freedom. It is a small story with a huge overtone that will stay with you long after the last page is turned.’
-- Sir Tim Smit, Executive Vice Chair & Co-Founder of the Eden Project‘There are two ghosts in the garden here: the young Charles aboard the Beagle, writing salt-stained letters to his sisters, and the figure of Jude Piesse herself, author of this tender and unexpected memoir. Slightly at sea herself in a new job, at one point marooned in her new office by flood water, she gives a vivid picture of the obsessiveness of research: the hallucinogenic quality of the trees as she paces the overgrown garden, the feel of the manuscripts as she pores over the sisters’ letters in nine-hour stints in the library, a young woman navigating a course through early motherhood and the world of academe.’
-- Katherine Swift, author of The Morville Hours‘The Ghost in the Garden is intelligent, curious, and moving nonfiction. It brings together biography, history, horticulture, and memoir — and does so with style and poignancy. Like the finest gardeners, Jude Piesse has laboured to give us something beautiful but also challenging; something that offers comforts without letting us get too comfortable with ourselves.’
-- Damon Young, author of Philosophy in the Garden‘Jude Piesse’s The Ghost in the Garden is a fascinating, beautifully written blend of biography, memoir, nature-writing, psychogeography, and history of science. Piesse shows us the human, quotidian world of the Darwin clan through the story of her discovery of their places and their stories, and the way they helped to seed Charles Darwin’s world-changing discoveries. In doing so, Piesse beautifully evokes what it is to be obsessed with a place, even when it no longer, quite, exists.’
-- Emma Darwin‘What is special about The Ghost in the Garden is the combination of research with an empathetic imagination that enables Piesse to show how much Darwin was influenced by the seven-acre estate over which he had roamed as a boy … Piesse is a conscientious reporter.’
-- Miranda Seymour * Financial Times *‘Skillfully blending memoir and biography … the result is an original take on a giant of science.’
* Publishers Weekly *‘It’s very well written, a beautiful book.’
-- Professor Luke O'Neill * Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute *‘Absorbing … Unexpected, fresh, and revealing … a joy.’
-- Helen Bynum * Literary Review *‘Well written and well researched.’
* Saga Magazine *‘[Piesse] unearths a fascinating past.’
-- Simon Webster * Organic Libra- Long-listed for Australian Book Design Awards for Best Designed Nonfiction Cover 2022 (Australia)
ISBN: 9781913348052
Dimensions: 210mm x 148mm x 27mm
Weight: unknown
336 pages