Spring rain A life lived in gardens

Marc Hamer

Book - 2023

"From the beloved author of How to Catch a Mole and Seed to Dust comes a highly original memoir of childhood, old age, and the restorative power of the garden. In this restorative little book, best enjoyed in a single sitting under a tree, an adventurous young boy who traveled the world in his mind meets the old man he becomes, and together they build a new garden from a neglected plot behind his house on the edge of town. Alternate chapters follow author and professional gardener Marc Hamer as a child and his current life as a 65 year old. Hamer weaves practical gardening knowledge through these two memoir strands as he describes the planning and planting of his new small garden near Cardiff, Wales. In the words of Hamer, 'Spring... Rain is about the joy of your own back garden. It is a story about the joy of small things, the world in a grain of sand, a universe in a small garden, with love for all the insects and slugs and flowers and weeds and seeds and roots and boundaries and shade and weather that the garden contains.'"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

635.092/Hamer
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 635.092/Hamer Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Published
Vancouver ; Berkeley ; London : Greystone Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Marc Hamer (author)
Physical Description
203 pages : illustrations ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781778400278
  • 1. Rain: An adventure at sea, treasure island, a little wooden hut
  • 2. Gardener: Gerberas, umbrella, zinc, guilt, bow tie
  • 3. Rain: Tools, seeds, a cleaning song, books and a train to nowhere
  • 4. Gardener: Arranging flowers, skeleton birds, a broken shed and letting go
  • 5. Rain: Alburnum to Chamomile
  • 6. Gardener: Venus, Lucifer, jellyfish, sunshine, crackly voice
  • 7. Rain: Horse farm, Antaeus, wolfsbane, a dying wasp
  • 8. Gardener: Ship of junk, memories, happiness, Thor
  • 9. Rain: A knife, a feather, starfish and a magpie's tongue
  • 10. Gardener: A new Eden, fear of the wild
  • 11. Rain: Anthills, molehills, pigtails, poison
  • 12. Gardener: A length of string, a blue wheelbarrow
  • 13. Rain: Tin-can radio, Slow the slug
  • 14. Gardener: A walk down by the eye-spikes, a dog, a ghost, a green man
  • 15. Rain: Rhubarb leaves and monkshood, Grandma's cows and dowsing
  • 16. Gardener: I need three hands, a list of plants, sorting seeds, sparkling water
  • 17. Rain: A kiss, beautiful scars
  • 18. Gardener: Feelings, desire and suffering, a concert
  • 19. Rain: Growing vegetables, a lost box
  • 20. Gardener: Free will, choices, Paradise Lost
  • 21. Rain: Tea for three, Blackpool rock
  • 22. Gardener: Witness, enjoying the movie, hedgehogs
  • 23. Rain: Elephants, powdered horses, half a lady, people from Glasgow
  • 24. Gardener: Forget-me-nots, Zen monks, colour and scent
  • 25. Rain: Winter, hand of glory, Gipsy Rose Lee leaves, rust
  • 26. Gardener: Paradise lost
  • 27. Rain: Settling dust, booze, mother, vagrancy
  • 28. Gardener: Paradise regained
  • The Encyclopaedia
  • The Illustrations
  • Dedication
Review by Library Journal Review

Gardener, poet, and artist Hamer completes his "Gardeners" trilogy (after Seed to Dust and How To Catch a Mole) with this beautifully descriptive, lyrical memoir. Chapters alternate between his childhood growing up with an abusive father and distant mother and his retirement years, where he revamps his own neglected garden after years of working in a client's, with brief glimpses of being unhoused as a teen. Learning--from the natural world and an old set of encyclopedias--enhanced his childhood, ultimately leading to a long career as a professional gardener. He discusses the process and the importance of recreating habitat in his own yard, as well as the joy of being immersed in nature, whether at home or away. Along the way, he shares his philosophy of life and death, his secrets to a happy life, and his coming to terms with his aging body that can no longer do all the things he wishes. VERDICT This ultimately hopeful memoir, with the natural world seamlessly woven throughout, will appeal to gardeners, natural history buffs, and those who relish natural history-framed memoirs like Margaret Renkl's Late Migrations and Meredith May's The Honey Bus.--Sue O'Brien

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.