Everything You Can Do in the Garden Without Actually Gardening

Everything You Can Do in the Garden Without Actually Gardening

Everything You Can Do in the Garden Without Actually Gardening

Published by Frances Lincoln in 2009

I suspect that the roots of this book lie in the satisfaction I got as a child from looking of the train window and comparing the wildly different arrangements people made on identical back garden plots as the Horsham train snaked into Victoria. But equally I had always loved the fanciful 18th and 19th century pattern books of garden buildings and furniture: rustic, Chinese, Egyptian. I thought of one of my favourite paintings by Charles Gere of an Edwardian tennis party, and I remembered wonderful garden scenes in novels from Jane Austen to E.F.Benson. This all coalesced and what emerged was a social history of how people have used their garden spaces over the ages; how they sulked and dreamed, smoked and ate, danced, played games, raised money, had parties, kept animals and children. Somehow among all the many books published on how to make a garden, or on the history of how gardens looked, no one else had quite looked at them in this way.

‘Philippa Lewis has written a highly entertaining and original book, quirkily designed to match the eccentric but very informative contents.’
Robin Simon, The British Art Journal

‘Philippa Lewis’s anthology . . . gives a delicious overview of eccentric behaviour – such as enthusiasts for outdoor eating. The quotations and illustrations range over a staggering amount of material, from Henry James to Punch magazine via a 1950s ad for fireworks. It’s a delight.’
Anna Pavord, The Independent Magazine

‘Philippa Lewis has clearly researched deeply and fresh eye pays dividends throughout. There are lengthy disquisitions on topics such as Turkish tents, 18th-century umbrellos and the possibilities of flirting while indulging in, for example, archery.’
Tim Richardson, The Telegraph