The Well-Chosen Garden
By (Author) Christopher Lloyd
Orion Publishing Co
Weidenfeld & Nicolson
8th June 2021
4th March 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Gardening: fruit and vegetable
Gardening: plants and cultivation guides
Nature therapy
635.9
Paperback
256
Width 152mm, Height 232mm, Spine 22mm
340g
The perfect book on how to make your garden the best it can be.
'Essential reading' Country Life'Funny, encouraging, informative' Sunday TimesWould your garden, small or large, in town or country, win a prize Is there room for improvement Everybody has favourite plants, but the ability to put them all together to ensure a splendid show throughout the year is a skill that must be acquired. THE WELL-CHOSEN GARDEN will guide you to making the most of your available space, help you avoid untimely gaps, colour clashes and many other pitfalls of garden planning.The perfect book for new and experienced gardeners alike.Lloyd writes as if he were talking, volubly and well. He is funny, encouraging, informative * SUNDAY TIMES *
Essential reading * COUNTRY LIFE *
The text is lucid, informative and light-hearted; beautifully and usefully illustrated * HOUSE & GARDEN *
He was the best informed, liveliest and most innovative gardening writer of our times * GUARDIAN *
Christopher Lloyd ranks with Gertrude Jekyll and Vita Sackville-West as one of the major figures in twentieth-century British gardening * THE TIMES *
He was the most interesting plantsman I have ever known -- Alan Titchmarsh
A gardening classic, as essential to every gardener as a sharp pair of secateurs or a good space -- Carol Klein on THE WELL-TEMPERED GARDEN
Christopher Lloyd taught us that we don't necessarily have to do things very differently - just better, and with all our heart * SPECTATOR *
British horticulture is blessed with many inspired plantsmen and elegant writers, but rarely do those qualities combine as seamlessly as in Christopher Lloyd * INDEPENDENT *
Christopher Lloyd spent years lovingly developing and refining his celebrated gardens at Great Dixter in Sussex. Throughout his career he was unparalleled in gardening journalism, writing for many publications from COUNTRY LIFE to the GUARDIAN. In 1979 the Royal Horticultural Society conferred on him its highest honour, the VICTORIA MEDAL OF HONOUR. He received the OBE for services to horticulture in 2000 and died in 2006.