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In fact, I would love to meet the M.F.K Fisher of gardening, so I will certainly make a detour to Amazon and look this guy up. Having worked side-by-side with Henry Mitchell at the Washington Post back in the day, I know that poets in the gardening arena are few and far between, just as they are in the food arena. We need you to be scouting for these great reads, and for the latest incarnatin of Beverly Nichols who may be struggling to get published. (Or maybe he/she is just bloggin and needs a wider audience?)

Yes. Love Nichols. And parts of his books are very funny!

As a man Beverly Nichols was not the greatest, to put it mildly. Let's just say he fully shared some of the very worst prejudices of his era and was not especially truthful to boot. As a writer, he was a pro and can be vey amusing, but -- a word to the wise. He fell into obscurity for very good reasons.

I much prefer the Reverend E A Bowles, Margery Fish, and countless others, who were also plants people.

Timber Press also publishes an excellent biography of Nichols, by Bryan Connan. While it's true he didn't lead the most exemplary of lives, the life he did lead is strangely fascinating, if you can accept him for who he was instead of who you think he ought to have been.

His novels tend toward a sentimentality that put them out of date even in their time, but his garden writing scintillates. He longed for greatness and regretted that his "light" fare, his garden and cat books, were his most famous works, but his writing seems most suited for them. Me, I would have been happy with that.

I have been reading more and more garden writers from the first part of the 20th century. Thank you for introducing me to another!

Beverley Nichols is one of my favorite writers because of his sense of fun and because he wrote so eloquently about the things I love most in life: cats, gardens and old houses, not necessarily in that order.:-)

Around 1987 I stumbled purely by accident over one of his books and have been hooked ever since.

I'm glad that Timber Press has been reprinting many of Beverleys books, they deserve a wider audience.

About the man himself: without sin, cast, first stone. Nuff said!

I just discovered Beverly Nichols a few days ago and am thrilled. I'm guessing that some of the "negative" is his prejudice, but that was typical of his time, and I forgive him. I'm interested in hearing anything about him.

I want to buy 'Green Grows the City', but don't know the price, and also need to know if it's in Aus. dollars or some other.
Please help.

Thanks,
Janet Cheriton

Lovers of Beverly Nichols may be interested in hunting down the books of another English garden writer, Marion Cran.
I found two in English 2nd hand book shops and am still searching for others. The ones I chanced on are The Garden of Ignorance and Garden Talks. They were published in 1917 & 1927 respectively.
Sometimes you could imagine you are reading Nichols so alike are their styles. Cran however is dedicated to gardening and there are no whimsical, fictitious characters lurking in the herbaceous borders.
I do recommend though, her lucid and charming prose. Reading Cran is like making visit to another England which is already lost.

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