Believe it or not but it's almost spring and this is definitely the time to start thinking about what you want to plant this year in your garden, buy seeds and get ready to do some gardening work. To celebrate the return of the garden to our life (although it's always in our heart, even when it's covered in snow for weeks..), we have a guest post with recommendations on 10 great books to read in your garden.Top Ten Books to Read in Your Garden
This guest post was contributed by Garden
Gardening is invigorating, dirty, tender, satisfying work and nothing quite compares to sinking your teeth into a sun-warmed, just-picked tomato, its juice dripping down your chin. One that you planted months prior, first indoors then transplanted out in your composted soil - preparing a plot being an art in itself. Then staking it and pinching its first flowers so seedings establish before fruit production, and finally weeding and mulching and watering and doing it all over again, and again.
Reading a book is a similar, delicious commitment, and one perhaps best enjoyed in your garden.
The following ten books all celebrate the outdoors, some in a grand way, others more quietly. May their contents inspire you to breathe your air more deeply, embrace your environs more fully.
THE BIG PICTURE
Planet Earth - Alastair Fothergill
Maybe you saw the Discovery Channel's program and are already familiar with the wondrous footage, shot over five years, of the world's wildlife and their habitats. Page turn at your leisure through these awe-inspiring images and accompanying text. A particularly enthralling section is a feature on the otherworldly Lechuguilla Cave, it's top-secret entrance and then strenuous subterranean descent.
HOW PLANT PASSION CAN TURN CRIMINAL
The Orchid Thief - Susan Orlean
New Yorker writer Orlean decides to explore the world of John Laroche, awaiting trial for stealing endangered orchids from Florida's Fakahatchee Swamp, after reading about him in a local newspaper. What follows is an eccentric, funny, and revealing story about an orchid-infatuated subculture.
LIVING OFF YOUR LAND
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle - Barbara Kingsolver, with Steven L. Hopp and Camille Kingsolver
A family's good-humoured and enlightening story about eating food only grown by them or from their local area for a whole year. It also includes recipes and sidebars on industrial agriculture.
AN OVERSEAS GARDEN
French Dirt - Richard Goodman
An enchanting account of Goodman's move from New York City to a French village, and what he discovers from gardening there - about the village's inhabitants and himself.
DREAM BIGGER
The Dirty Life: On Farming, Food, and Love - Kristin Kimball
City girl moves upstate to start a cooperative farm with the man who will become her husband. The memoir, while initially idealistic, is refreshingly honest about the hard work necessary to build and maintain a farm.
NO DIRT, JUST BUGS
National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Insects & Spiders - Lorus and Margery Milne
A wonderfully authoritative visual guide - includes 702 photographs - with detailed descriptions of habitats, ranges, food and life cycles of North American insects and spiders.
YUM
Eat Your Yard - Nan K. Chase
Chase details the 35 different trees, shrubs, vines, herbs and flowers that you can grow on your property then enjoy at your next meal!
PERHAPS INSPIRING YOU TO FARM
The Seasons on Henry’s Farm - Terra Brockman
Brockman expertly - and with tremendous heart - writes about the cycle of a year on her Illinois sustainable farm.
MARTHA THEY AREN'T
The Bucolic Plague - Josh Kilmer-Purcell
A hilarious read - and true story - about a gay couple who make a go of the rural life before they became Planet Green's Fabulous Beekman Boys.
THOUGHTFULLY EARTH-MOVING
In the Company of Stone - Dan Snow
Waller Dan Snow builds, yes, walls, but also dams, grottos, pathways, spheres, staircases, terraces, even softball field bleachers, all with found stone and without mortar or nails. Called dry-stone construction and completely hand built, Snow's art is celebrated in Peter Mauss's gorgeous photographs while Snow's prose - equally practical and poetic - are as engaging as his works.