Sabtu, 10 Desember 2011

Download PDF Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales

Download PDF Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales

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Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales

Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales


Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales


Download PDF Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales

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Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales

Product details

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Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 3 hours and 38 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: Tantor Audio

Audible.com Release Date: December 18, 2018

Language: English, English

ASIN: B07L18K1N5

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

This is a very interesting and well-designed book focusing on an important part of BP's life and work that falls between art and farming. Pictures take up more than 50% of this smallish book, but the pictures are good-sized (many full page or double page) and very well reproduced, and include many I haven't seen in other books, including early photos of BP in her gardens or Lake District landscapes, her drawings of Lakeland views, her watercolors of flowers (which I particularly love; they remind me of Japanese flower prints), and modern photographs of her gardens as they are today.The text is also excellent, including quotes from many letters about her gardening experiences, and discussions of how her interests in plants are expressed in the little books. Gardening as Beatrix approached it included flowers, shrubs, trees, vegetables, and fruits, often mixed together; her gardening aesthetic was anything but formal. As she went about her mission of saving and restoring great swathes of Lake District landscape, eliminating anything unsightly, perfecting and protecting views, and creating harmony between agriculture and nature, her ideas as to what actually constituted a garden continued to expand; this work was, "in a sense, landscaping on a regional scale."

Marta McDowell's "Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life" is almost sure to delight all who lovingly remember the stories of Peter Rabbit, Squirrel Nutkin, and Jemima Puddle-Duck which readied us for meeting Mole, Water Rat, Toad, and Badger. Even better, if these admirers of Beatrix Potter are slightly mad about gardens and wander in their dreams among the dreaming spires of English foxgloves & delphiniums. (In this review, as in McDowell's book, Beatrix Potter is sometimes referred to as Beatrix, sometimes as Beatrix Potter, and after her marriage, sometimes as Mrs. Heelis. Hopefully, this won't be confusing.)This richly created book offers on almost every page superbly reproduced water colors of landscapes, plants, and the small creatures of hedgerow and streams, or photographs of the more than 10 homes in which Beatrix lived and gardened. No one, not even Durer, has drawn bunnies like Beatrix Potter, bunnies with the softest fur, and on p. 106, the roundest tummies, as six lie together sleeping off the soporific effects of a lettuce orgy.Part One of this three part tale describes Beatix Potter's life in McDowell's framework of a plant: germination, offshoots, flowering, roots, ripening, and setting seed (140 pages bursting with the child's precociously talented paintings through her final flowering as a conservationist who wills 4,000 acres of Lake District lands to the National Trust).Beatrix was the only daughter of second generation wealth. To her supremely status-conscious parents, almost no one was good enough for her company or her love, making her early life lonely. She turned to drawing & botanical research. But a scientific society rejected her exquisite portfolio of mushroom paintings & original studies of spore germination, turning her forever away from formal scientific work. We share her sorrow at her first betrothed's sudden death and we cheer for her eventual declaration of independence in marrying a second suitor, Mr. William Heelis of Sawrey in the Lake district, with whom she shared 33 years.Part Two has the happy format of classics on gardening: following a year in Beatrix Potter's gardens. The wealthy Potters had summer, winter and spring abodes & Beatrix planted where she bloomed. Here, McDowell relies on Beatrix's letters and diaries as well as her own professional knowledge to tell what Mrs. Heelis & her Willie were seeing, planting, harvesting----and she uses the Tales & their paintings to show how closely Potter intertwined her plants and the poetry of her stories. For instance, the plants surrounding that devious ginger-whiskered fellow, Mr. Tod, are foxgloves. Peter's iconic radish picture is so precise, we can plant seeds of the same fine nibble. The writing in this section is enchanting: for instance, "Poppies unfurl their buds like butterflies from cocoons." (p 127). That's McDowell, not Potter.The third major section is to me, most magical. Mc Dowell followed the path of Potter, visiting each place she once lived or visited. The result is both a travel guide and history. Photographs and paintings of Beatrix's gardens in her time are shown next to pictures and descriptions of what remains now. This is written as informally as letters home, with details on roads to take, car parks (or not), inns, B&Bs, as well as the gardens themselves.As with all gardens, even those as lovingly maintained as Sackville-West's Sissinghurst, much is changed. McDowell writes of Hill Top Farm, Beatrix's first "all hers" home place:"As you look at the garden and its swath of flowers, [you must] realize that few of [Beatrix's] actual plants...are still growing in the garden. The trick to preservation gardening is to keep the garden looking more or less as it did in her day, while dealing with the inexorable fact that plants grow, spread, and sooner or later die."So do we all, but in this book, the landscapes of Jeremy Fisher and of Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cottontail live again, as does that remarkable artist, gardener, and woman, Beatrix Potter.For gardeners, this book is enhanced by lists of plants Beatrix Potter grew in her farms and showed in her books (splendid idea!). In "The Tale to Tom Kitten," for instance, 18 plants are painted in loving detail, from Japanese anemones to water lilies.Any reader alerts? This is a gardening biography, not a comprehensive analysis of Potter's tales & writing, not an in-depth analysis of her life and art, and definitely not a guide for gardeners on design & planting. McDowell gives generous and extensive recommendations for in-depth reading on all these points, together with a good index and a comprehensive bibliography of Potter's books. It is rather something magical, the tale of how a great talent unfolded against the odds, and was realized in earthly gardens and in the numinous landscapes of her stories.If this appeals to your child, reader, artist, and the gardener within----highly, very highly recommended. It is a unique, beautiful, and altogether lovely book.

As the author suggests, reading is enhanced if you have Beatrix Potter's tales nearby for reference, as many scenes are described from real life (existing buildings and gardens) which are depicted in the stories. Some scenes of the stories are included near the detailed descriptions, but not all.The writer is straightforward and accurate. She notes in the preamble that she wasn't really 'aware' of Beatrix Potter until she received a cookie jar figurine at her wedding shower. I grew up with these books. I placed myself in the scenes; went into the rabbit burrow, fell into the watering can, ate bread and milk and blackberries for supper. Although I am only halfway through my copy of this as of last night and I feel there is a lack of the deep appreciation of humor and irony which is throughout Beatrix Potter's writing. Kids won't care, but as an adult, this almost feels more like I am reading a school book report. (Thus my 'good' vs 'great' rating on the writing itself.)Still, this is a nice connection between Peter Rabbit's life on the page and the reality of Beatrix Potter's inspiration. It is also an inexpensive way to feel as if you have visited her still existing farm.If you don't have it already, buy this one first:At Home with Beatrix Potter: The Creator of Peter Rabbit Paperback – May 1, 2009by Susan Denyer

n this charming and delightful book, Marta McDowell takes the reader on a personal journey, tracing the development and eventual blossoming of Beatrix Potter's life as a gardener, from her early childhood interest in plants through her development as an artist to her final years as an estate farmer and naturalist.The reader follows Beatrix Potter through a year in her gardens, learning what she was growing in each season -- pansies, peas, foxgloves, pinks, roses, and currants, and all the other old-fashioned cottage plants that fill her illustrations.The book also serves as a traveler's guide to help the reader discover or rediscover Beatrix Potter's Lake District, her garden at Hill Top Farm, and the many other gardens and landscapes that nourished her imagination.Beautifully written and illustrated, Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The plants and places that inspired the classic children's tales' is an enchanting portrait of the beloved writer and artist. A must read and one for the keeper shelf.

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Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales PDF

Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales PDF

Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales PDF
Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life: The Plants and Places That Inspired the Classic Children's Tales PDF

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