From the Ground Up: The Story of a First Garden


From the Ground Up: The Story of a First Garden
by Amy Stewart

272 pages
Algonquin Books, 2001
List price: $15.99


You know Amy from her other books, such as the recently published Wicked Plants and her eye-opening Flower Confidential (which I just recently read). She's also a contributing writer for the well-known gardening blog, GardenRant. But aside from her more recent endeavors, I have a soft spot in my heart for her first book, about her first garden.

I first read From the Ground Up: The Story of a First Garden back in 2005, when I was a novice gardener myself. It was the first gardening book I ever read and I've recommended it countless times since then.

The beauty of this book is that regardless of whether you only have a curious interest in gardening or you've been around the garden centers a few times, it will appeal to both. Amy lets her gardening naivete hang out here and shares her failures as well as her successes as she relates the adventures of creating her first garden in Santa Cruz, California.

"My lettuce. It was a silly thing to get excited over, I suppose. Growing lettuce is a small accomplishment; the results are fleeting, perishable. And I only had one short row to show for three months of gardening: a dozen or so plants, barely enough for two salads. In fact, I almost hated to go after them with my scissors. I'd worked so hard to grow them in the first place. They were like little works of art, these lettuce heads in miniature. It was a shame to snip off even a single leaf."


At the end of each chapter, Amy shares the knowledge she gained along the way during that first year. Gardening tips, recipes, and plant recommendations are just a few of the tidbits you'll find.

Amy has since gone on to wow the gardening world, but peeking into this little window of her early start will have you laughing and cheering her on. It's almost as if she's in your kitchen, telling her story as you share a cup of coffee. Charming.

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Amy Stewart tends a garden of her own in northern California. She is the award-winning author of four books on the perils and pleasures of the natural world.

Her essays and commentaries have appeared in the New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, Garden Design, Organic Gardening, and elsewhere. She's been featured on NPR, Good Morning America and CBS Sunday Morning. She is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and a California Horticultural Society Writer's Award.

Stewart lives in Eureka, California, with her husband Scott Brown. They own an antiquarian bookstore called Eureka Books and tend a flock of unruly hens in their backyard.

She is also the author of The Earth Moved: On the Remarkable Achievements of Earthworms, and the New York Times bestselling Flower Confidential: The Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful in the Business of Flowers. Her newest book is Wicked Plants: The Weed That Killed Lincoln's Mother and Other Botanical Atrocities (Algonquin Books, May 2009).

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The book reviewed in this post was purchased by the reviewer.

2 comments:

TC said...

How do you find the time to read so many books?? I'd like to read Amy's "Wicked Plants" but haven't picked up a copy yet.

I'm wondering if you've read any of Felder Rushing's books? One in particular comes to mind: "Tough Plants for Northern Gardens." (I wrote the foreword.)

And then there's Michael Pollan...need I say more?

Kylee from Our Little Acre said...

TC, what do you know about that? Yes, I own a signed copy of Felder's book, Tough Plants for Northern Gardens: Low Care, No Care, Tried and True Winners and since it had been so long ago when I read it, I didn't know you wrote the foreward! THANK YOU for pointing that out to me! Now I'll have to have YOU sign it as well, should we ever know that we'll be in the same place at the same time.

I met Felder at a local garden show and my mom and I had a rather personal "Two on One" session with him that was absolutely fabulous. What an amazing and fun individual. He really made an impression on me, as you can see from reading the last part of my blog post that relates the encounter. :-) And yes, I have a photo of myself with him, too, that Mom took.

Oh, I have his Scarecrows: Making Harvest Figures and Other Yard Folks book, too.

How do I read so fast? I get asked that all the time. I don't know. I just do. And yes, I comprehend what I read. There are, though, some things you can read quickly and some you have to slow way down and absorb every precious word.

I want to get Pollan's The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World after seeing the PBS show by the same name.