Five Books I’ve Read About Gardens & Plant Collecting

Inspired by the good weather we’ve had over the past few days in the south of England, and as a break from tending my own garden, here are five books I’ve read that involve creating gardens or plant collecting. Links from each title will take you to my review or the book description on Goodreads.

Book cover of Earthly Joys by Philippa Gregory with background of plants and grass

Earthly Joys by Philippa Gregory – Historical novel about John Tradescant who rose from humble beginnings to become gardener to Sir Robert Cecil, George Villiers and latterly King Charles I, and travelled the world collecting new plants.

Where the Hornbeam Grows by Beth Lynch – Memoir charting the author’s personal experience of being ‘uprooted’ from her accustomed habitat and ‘transplanted’ somewhere new and entirely alien – in this case, Switzerland.

Book cover of A Fenland Garden by Frances Pryor

A Fenland Garden by Francis Pryor – The story of transforming an area of neglected farmland into a garden in a complex and fragile English landscape – the Fens of southern Lincolnshire.

The Fair Botanists by Sara Sheridan – Set in 1822, excitement has gripped the city of Edinburgh as, in the newly-installed Botanic Garden, an Agave Americana plant looks set to flower – an event that only occurs once every few decades.

Book cover of The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert

The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert – Epic historical novel following the fortunes of the fictional Alma Whittaker who becomes a gifted botanist and renowned bryologist (someone who studies moss and liverworts) and travels the world in search of new species.

Book Review – Darkness Does Not Come At Once by Glenn Bryant @GlennMBryant

About the Book

Book cover of Darkness Does Not Come At Once by Glenn Bryant

Meike is seventeen and she uses a wheelchair. Already in life she’s accepted that she’ll always somehow be ‘different’. But overnight, different becomes dangerous after the government announces disabled youngsters under the age of eighteen must spend the war in specially designated institutions.

Suddenly Meike is on the run in the rural lanes she calls home, bordering Berlin. It is 1939 and the whole of Germany, it seems, wants to fight the world.

Quietly, members of Meike’s family distance themselves, but two unlikely allies stand by her. One is an elderly woman and a lifelong Catholic, forced to question her faith; the other is a fifteen-year-old boy Meike hardly knows. They begin a search for answers as they scramble to find Meike and, in a country they no longer recognise, themselves.

Format: Paperback (288 pages) Publisher: The Book Guild Ltd
Publication date: 28th April 2024 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Darkness Does Not Come At Once on Goodreads

Purchase Darkness Does Not Come At Once from Amazon UK [link provided for convenience not as part of an affiliate programme]


My Review

In Darkness Does Not Come At Once the author returns to the subject he explored in his first novel, A Quiet Genocide, namely the horrific treatment of people with a disability (physical or mental) by the Nazi regime. But this time we’re experiencing this as it happens, to a young woman named Meike who uses a wheelchair following an accident.

Following the arrest of her father, Meike goes to stay with her grandparents, Marta and Hans, and makes friends with a local boy, Alfred. But her happiness is shortlived because in a dramatic change of fortune, witnessed by Alfred, but the traumatic circumstances of which we only fully discover later, Meike is sent to Hadamar. Supposedly it’s an institution designed to safeguard disabled people for the duration of the war. However, it’s anything but a sanctuary; rather it’s a place of the most depraved cruelty in which the patients are treated as less than human. When one nurse shows a degree of kindness towards the inmates, she is repriminded by Hadamar’s chief nurse. ‘Lumps of flesh, that is all. Worthless, useless idiots, all of them, serving no purpose, of no value.’

I think we’re all aware that atrocities were committed by the Nazis during World War Two against various sections of society. But the nature of these still has the ability to shock. For me that includes the ruthless efficiency with which they were carried out: paperwork completed, records kept, numbers tallied, targets set.  One of the many chilling scenes in the book depicts the staff of Hadamar celebrating the successful completion of their final task.

The book explores the various responses to Meike’s situation. Initially, her grandmother’s focus is on being allowed to visit Meike, believing the propaganda that Hadamar is a place of safety. When she discovers the truth, her attitude turns to a fierce determination to rescue Meike. However, the people she approaches don’t want to help, either through fear, complicity or an unwillingness to confront reality. Her husband, Hans, fears he no longer has sufficient stomach for the fight because of what he experienced in the First World War, returning home as part of a defeated and humiliated army. And Meike’s sister, Anselma, has fallen prey to indoctrination by the Nazi regime. This gives rise to another particularly chilling scene.

The book’s title is apt because the darkness descends little by little until you can’t believe the light will ever return. But it does eventually – if only for some – because of the courage of those who refuse to give up the fight. And, l though I would have liked to learn more about the lives of the characters in the intervening years, the book’s ending made me very happy.

I wouldn’t say Darkness Does Not Come At Once is an easy read because of its subject matter but it feels important that we are reminded of the depths to which humanity can descend.

My thanks to the author for my digital review copy.

In three words: Powerful, moving, dramatic
Try something similar: When the World Was Ours by Liz Kessler


About the Author

Author Glenn Bryant

Glenn Bryant is a former daily news journalist who today works as a senior copywriter for a financial technology company. Darkness Does Not Come at Once is his second novel, following A Quiet Genocide, published in 2018. He is a registered carer for his wife, Juliet, who has a spinal cord injury. They live happily in South Oxfordshire.

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