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The Garden at the End of Time: Getting By in the Age of Climate Change

Autor John Hanson Mitchell
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 mai 2025
John Hanson Mitchell has long written about his garden outside of Boston, and about the plants and animals with whom he shares this land. In 2022, the United Nations and others started reporting the true severity of the climate crisis as the Earth passed a point of no return. All across the globe it was the worst year on record for climate-related disasters, including extinctions, deadly floods, massive fires, and dramatic droughts. Mitchell, like so many, felt overwhelmed. He looked to the story of Voltaire’s Candide, and settled on the famous aphorism from that book: “We must cultivate our garden.”

The Garden at the End of Time features Mitchell’s trademark blend of science, literature, and anecdote as he processes both the information he is reading from various sources and what it prompts him to do in his own small corner of the world. The story that unfolds is one of Mitchell diversifying his plantings; fighting what he sees as unnecessary local development; walking through and observing changes in the wild lands nearby; continuing to read the news from around the world; and meditating on other moments, real and imagined, when people sought refuge even as they did their part to improve a personally and collectively stressful situation. 

Readers discover the impossibility of separating gardening from global warming, while also seeing the solace that exposure to plants can offer, in addition to their contribution to carbon consumption. With gravitas, kindness, and wit, Mitchell offers a model for maintaining a connection to nature even as it reels from manmade threats.  
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781625348715
ISBN-10: 1625348711
Pagini: 185
Dimensiuni: 133 x 216 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bright Leaf
Colecția Bright Leaf

Notă biografică

JOHN HANSON MITCHELL is the founder and was the longtime editor of Massachusetts Audubon Society’s award-winning journal Sanctuary. He has published numerous books, including, most recently, Legends of a Common Stream. His book Ceremonial Time: Fifteen Thousand Years on One Square Mile was the Editor's Choice in the New York Times’ Book Review; six of his books based on the square mile of land featured in Ceremonial Time were collected and published as The Scratch Flat Chronicles. He won the John Burroughs Essay Award for his Sanctuary piece, “Of Time and the River.” He continues to live on that one square mile of land in eastern Massachusetts. 

Cuprins

Contents

Extracts and Evidence
Preface. The Point of No Return

Part One. Candide's Garden
1. The Peace Rose
2. The Rambler Rose
3. To a Wild Rose
4. The Princess of Monaco Rose
5. The White Rose
6. The Damask Rose
7. The New Dawn Rose
8. The Reine Victoria Rose

Part Two. Beyond the Garden Walls
9. The Betty Prior Rose
10. Farewell to a Wild Garden
11. The French Lace Rose

Part Three. World Without End
12. The Cardinal Richelieu Rose
13. The Last Rose of Summer

Epilogue
Acknowledgments

Recenzii

"A sterling, beautifully written antidote for the global climate blues. Mitchell's book is a practical, emotional and spiritual account of the benefits of gardens in a changing world."—Mark Kelley, founder of the Hickory Consortium 

“How do environmental anxiety, Voltaire, Candide, religion, and gardens as ecological and spiritual sanctuaries intersect with climate change and world decay? John Hanson Mitchell reflects on this and much more in The Garden at the End of Time, an entertaining read unlike anything else in this field.”—Douglas W. Tallamy, author of Nature’s Best Hope: A New Approach to Conservation That Starts in Your Hard

“In dark times, creating and experiencing a tree-and-flower garden provides so much—inspiration, exercise, spiritual growth, CO2 uptake, a biodiverse sanctuary, sense of place, hope, link to nature and earth, belief in the future, a statement of resistance, even the context of history. Join the author in his labyrinth of paths and sitting quietly, with birds singing, flowers blooming, butterflies fluttering, winds howling, and, yes, the surroundings changing. Many before us have gotten through tough times in a garden.”—Richard T. T. Forman, author of Towns, Ecology, and the Land