People sometimes ask reviewers how they happen to choose the books they write about. In this case, the answer is easy: The picture on the cover of “Rosemary Verey: The Life and Lessons of a Legendary Gardener” was so lushly, ravishingly gorgeous that I couldn’t resist picking up the book. I subsequently learned that the Laburnum Walk at Barnsley was, according to its frequent photographer Jerry Harpur, perhaps “the most famous view of any garden anywhere in the world.”
Another reason I was drawn to this book is far more personal. I hoped that it would inspire me to become a more active gardener. Verey (1918-2001), as her biographer Barbara Paul Robinson says, “made beautiful gardens seem possible to the average homeowner. Her message was that you, too, could do this if you tried.” Built in 1697, Barnsley House certainly looks grand, but its surrounding property amounts to less than four acres, though — as the color plates in this book reveal — every foot of its soil has been deployed for banks of flowers, graveled walks, horticultural ornaments (a fountain and sundial, statuary), formally precise plantings and even a potager (an elegant French term for a vegetable plot).




































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