Publisher's Synopsis
Why do gardens look the way they do? David Stuart turns the conventional view of garden history upside down and argues that it is the plants themselves that have driven the evolution of the modern garden. From the ends of the earth ÔÇô the outer reaches of the Ottoman Empire, China, Japan, the Americas ÔÇô daring explorers brought new plants back to gardens across Europe (encountering hair-raising adventures along the way). The influx of exotica caused a frenzy of hybridization, which in turn inspired gardeners to make room to show off the latest fritillary, delphinium or rose.
Stuart traces the making and remaking of the modern garden as it acquired features ÔÇô such as the flower bed, the herbaceous border, the glasshouse ÔÇô that we now take for granted, and came full circle to welcome native species and cottage garden varieties long neglected in favour of the foreign and the new. He concludes that continued plant prospecting may prove essential to protecting botanic diversity and preserving species rapidly disappearing from the wild. Long shaped by plants, our gardens may now prove crucial to saving the plants themselves.