Product Details
In the Land of the Blue Poppies: The Collected Plant-Hunting Writings of Frank Kingdon Ward (Modern Library Gardening)

In the Land of the Blue Poppies: The Collected Plant-Hunting Writings of Frank Kingdon Ward (Modern Library Gardening)
By Frank Kingdon Ward

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Product Description

A Modern Library Paperback Original

During the first years of the twentieth century, the British plant collector and explorer Frank Kingdon Ward went on twenty-four impossibly daring expeditions throughout Tibet, China, and Southeast Asia, in search of rare and elusive species of plants. He was responsible for the discovery of numerous varieties previously unknown in Europe and America, including the legendary Tibetan blue poppy, and the introduction of their seeds into the world’s gardens. Kingdon Ward’s accounts capture all the romance of his wildly adventurous expeditions, whether he was swinging across a bottomless gorge on a cable of twisted bamboo strands or clambering across a rocky scree in fear of an impending avalanche. Drawn from writings out of print for almost seventy-five years, this new collection, edited and introduced by professional horticulturalist and House & Garden columnist Tom Christopher, returns Kingdon Ward to his deserved place in the literature of discovery and the literature of the garden.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #322566 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-04-15
  • Released on: 2003-04-15
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Describing one of his 22 expeditions throughout Tibet, China and Southeast Asia, British plant collector Ward (1885-1958) wrote, "But it is not so much the plants which fascinate, as the excitement of climbing and exploring the cliff itself." That is the excitement readers feel here, traveling with Ward to discover unimagined dangers, grueling hardships, astonishing landscapes, exotic cultures-and, on occasion, a plant. As impossible to categorize as it is to put down, this is not a gardening book, although it will appeal to the millions who cultivate descendents of the seed Ward so often risked his life to collect. Travel readers and armchair adventurers will relish it, but the journeys recounted here were mapped to Ward's innate sense of ecology more than geography. A non-chronological "mosaic" intended by Christopher to reflect "this remarkable man's personality and daily life," the edited narrative never flags, treating readers to the kind of juxtapositions that surprised and delighted Ward: "Cuckoos and parakeets... as incongruous as a clump of Bananas and Pine trees I had noticed growing farther down the valley." Christopher edits Ward's work cinematically, creating an internal logic of theme and observation rather than time or place. Leaps of more than a decade and hundreds of miles are made within a few pages. Unfamiliar characters suddenly appear, vanish and reappear chapters later. Somehow, none of this is in the least disconcerting; the selected text creates context. The result is a seamless, rousing read.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
?If there is a better writer about the garden than he, I do not know who that would be. . . . This collection . . . is a joyous event.? ?from the Preface by Jamaica Kincaid -- Review

Review
“If there is a better writer about the garden than he, I do not know who that would be. . . . This collection . . . is a joyous event.” —from the Preface by Jamaica Kincaid


Customer Reviews

Real travel adventure5
We tend to take for granted the intrepid and brave explorers that brought us knowledge of far-off places and new plants and peoples. Reading Frank Kingdon Ward is like being part of his party as he nonchalantly climbs unknown, rugged mountains for the love of discovery. His endurance and bravery during a time when disease and primitive camping were common, is an inspiration to those of us coddled in today's comforts. I pick up his books whenever I begin to feel that modern life is "difficult"!