Reviews

Cultivating Delight: A Natural History of My Garden by Diane Ackerman

novelideea's review

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informative slow-paced

2.0

r_lumbrix's review

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2.0

I picked up this book because I loved the title. The actual contents were pleasant in much the same way that walking through a garden is pleasant: lots of sensory detail; light, breezy feelings; interesting facts to learn about nature. I really enjoyed some parts of it, but it felt too long. At first it was a nice respite from the heaviness of this year, but after so many descriptions of different types of roses, it started to feel frivolous & irrelevant. If this book were half the length, I would have enjoyed it a lot more.

patlibrary89's review against another edition

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2.0

pretty wordy. it was just ok

patsaintsfan's review

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informative lighthearted reflective relaxing slow-paced

4.0

Garden/gardening book? Yes, please.

vverbatim7's review

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adventurous hopeful informative lighthearted reflective slow-paced

4.0

durrance_c's review

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hopeful inspiring reflective slow-paced

3.5

cherylanntownsend's review against another edition

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5.0

This book was a delight. Her sheer joy in gardening and nature were enlivening. It made me look deeper and longer at my own. (It also had me moving my obedient plants to new locations.)

Filled with garden view reminiscing and avid notations, one can’t help but learn a bounty of horticultural knowledge, as well as unrelated trivial as her mind wanders. Fascinating! I have a small notebook filled with her observations and revelations. Oh, and her poetic mind assuredly adds to the joy of reading.

Enjoyed her roaming from topic to topic, often with each new paragraph indentation. I identify with how her mind flits, like a hummingbird, from one to another thought.

Quite the homage to John Muir “the ultimate nature mystic,” is given as she refers to her own “at-one-ment”... a “word” I intend to use. She also devotes appreciation to numerous in her chapters. Found the paragraphs expounding Gertrude Jekyll quite fascinating. Her intense senses (differentiating the sounds of trees from species to species.) And how her study of art segued into her garden design.

Her mathematical car/garden wheelbarrow is classic. Every gardener can identify. (It’s exactly why I bought my van!) Then the 2nd gear Bug follow up woke my husband up with my snickering. (Spoiler!)

There’s just so much observation and notation as she takes us from season to season, thought to action, that you truly feel as if you are in her garden with her, snacking in cherries, in situ, eyes wide open. Each sense is brought to attention and you find yourself looking out into your own garden with a keener eye, sense of smell-hearing-touch as each chapter ends. A delightful read. A treasure to shelve.

canadianbookworm's review

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4.0

Very good, liked the season by season approach

janetlun's review

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4.0

Lovely ramble through a year in her garden, with side trips into wildlife observations and wonderful literary quotes. The story of catching and tagging squirrels is particularly good.
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