Garden

Regular price €32.50
Quantity:
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
A01=Jonathan Bate
Author_Jonathan Bate
Category=AGN
Category=AGNL
Category=JBCC6
Category=NHB
Category=QRAB1
Category=WM
Category=WMB
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_home-garden
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forthcoming

Product details

  • ISBN 9780008610555
  • Weight: 270g
  • Dimensions: 159 x 240mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

From the Garden of Eden to Gethsemane, from the Hanging Gardens of Babylon to the pleasure gardens of Versailles, from the Zen gardens of Kyoto to the landscapes of Capability Brown and New York's High Line, the garden has always been far more than somewhere to grow things.

It is where humanity has worked out its relationship with the natural world — the place where culture, spirituality and nature converge. An inspiration for poets, painters and philosophers across four thousand years and every civilisation on earth.

In this magnificent work of scholarship, one of our greatest literary critics and cultural historians takes us on an extraordinary journey through the gardens of both the world and the human imagination. Sweeping in scope and ambition, this sumptuous and richly illustrated book reveals the garden as a place where we have always worked out our deepest longings for beauty, order, innocence and belonging. Drawing on poetry, painting, philosophy, mythology and religion — from Ovid and the Song of Solomon to Shakespeare, Jane Austen and Emily Dickinson — he shows how the garden has inspired our greatest art and consoled us in our darkest hours.

Here is the space where, as Andrew Marvell wrote, we may annihilate ‘all that's made / To a green thought in a green shade’ — that perfect, paradoxical stillness in which the mind empties itself into nature and finds itself restored.

Gardening is the most popular leisure activity in Britain. More than 27 million of us tend a plot, a window box, a rooftop or a patch of earth. Illustrated with more than 150 beautiful images, this book reminds us that it is to the garden, private and public, that we turn for solace, sustenance and sanity. It is a reminder that wherever we human beings have settled, we have reached, instinctively, towards the garden.

Sir Jonathan Bate is the author of twenty books, including biographies, all of which won prizes, of English literature’s three great poets of nature: William Wordsworth, Ted Hughes and John Clare. Foundation Professor of Environmental Humanities at Arizona State University and a Senior Research Fellow at Oxford University, where he was formerly Provost of Worcester College, he is widely regarded as one of the world’s leading Shakespeare scholars as well as a pioneer of ecological approaches to literature and culture. The citation for his knighthood described him as ‘truly a Renaissance man'. He has a reading knowledge of ancient Greek, Latin, Italian, French and German, but will ensure that colleagues with relevant expertise check his treatment of Chinese, Arabic, Russian, Japanese and Hispanic sources. He is a keen gardener himself.

More from this author