Books to bring readers down to earth.The Spirituality of Gardening By Donna Sinclair Northstone Publishing $40.00 A Mystic Garden Working with Soil, Attending to Soul By Gunilla Norris THE GARDEN AS spiritual autobiography Spiritual autobiography is a genre of non-fiction prose that dominated Protestant writing during the seventeenth century, particularly in England, particularly that of dissenters. is a common theme explored by Donna Sinclair's The Spirituality of Gardening and Gunilla Norris" A Mystic Garden, Working with Soil, Attending to Soul. The Spirituality of Gardening by Ms. Sinclair, an award-winning writer with the United Church Observer The United Church Observer is a Canadian Methodist newspaper that was founded in 1829 as a weekly newspaper Christian Guardian, with Egerton Ryerson as the editor. It is currently a monthly publication, except for each year's combined July/August issue. , has stunning photography and prose powerful enough to convert one Into a novice gardener or an environmentalist environmentalist a person with an interest and knowledge about the interaction of humans and animals with the environment. . Ms. Sinclair declares that her book is about the spirituality of the garden that is "not attached to any one faith." There are references to stories from the Bible, the Talmud, native spirituality, and other beliefs and faiths. After all, she states, "the stories that illuminate the long relationship of the people of earth with their Creator are many and varied, and belong to all." Divided into sections that explore the spiritual meanings of gardening, it is, in many ways, Ms. Sinclair's own story of faith. Yet she is smart and sensitive enough not to stick to her own divine afflatus--a trap that some writers of spiritual books succumb to, at their own peril. Instead, she intersperses her own spiritual journey with those of others. On gardening "as resistance," she reflects on the gardener as activist. Gardeners, she writes, see the world as Gaia (in Greek mythology Greek mythology Oral and literary traditions of the ancient Greeks concerning their gods and heroes and the nature and history of the cosmos. The Greek myths and legends are known today primarily from Greek literature, including such classic works as Homer's Iliad and , the early earth goddess earth goddess: see Great Mother Goddess. ), "one single organism, the living and sacred earth," and they become restless when they see governments "intent on licensing for harvest every forest, the lungs of the planet." In another, a reflection on the plight of farmer refugees, she tells the story of Central American Central America A region of southern North America extending from the southern border of Mexico to the northern border of Colombia. It separates the Caribbean Sea from the Pacific Ocean and is linked to South America by the Isthmus of Panama. campesinos making the dangerous return to their villages in the 1980s, because they say, "we must go home. Our children are forgetting how to plant the corn." Her account of how nature and spirituality fu-st stirred her soul is poignant. "As a small child, I remember leaning over the side of our rowboat, letting my hand trail in the water. And I remember happiness; a powerful sense that I, and the water and the boat and the trees on the not-so-distant shore were one. As I grew older, I put away childish things." Fortunately, for Ms. Sinclair, her passion for gardening reconnected her with Eden. A garden, she writes, is "body prayer" it is "is an attempt to build harmony, to place life into proper proportions, to compensate with order where there is chaos, or to offer a tangle of wilderness where life has grown too rigid." In a world "of sensory overload
Sensory overload (sometimes abbreviated to SO) is a condition where one or more of the five senses are strained and it becomes difficult to focus on the task at hand. , with too much noise and too much harsh light, gardens offer a certain silence, a quality of light, smell, texture and color." Some fascinating facts dot the book. Referencing Edwinna von Baeyer's book, Rhetoric and Roses, Ms. Sinclair tells us that the Canadian Pacific Railway Canadian Pacific Railway, transcontinental transportation system in Canada and extending into the United States, privately owned and operated. The construction of a railroad crossing the continent in Canadian territory was one of the conditions on which British had once been "Canada's head gardener The head gardener (also known as a curator) or as a Master Gardener is an individual who manages the staff of a large garden, landscape or park, such as a residential garden, botanical garden, theme park, public park, museum or roadside embankments and islands. " for decades until cars and airplanes diminished railway travel. "At its peak, says Von Baeyer, the company oversaw 'gardens dotted along 25,749 km of track, from coast to coast, through every climactic condition possible in Canada." Why gardening? It was deemed "therapeutic" for workers. An added bonus is a timeline of the history of gardening This entry concerns the history of ornamental gardening considered as an amenity of civilized life, as a vehicle for style, for conspicuous show and even an expression of philosophy. and quotations on gardening from historical figures like Gandhi and Bertrand Russell. A Mystic Garden is a slim book of meditations and apothegm ap·o·thegm also ap·o·phthegm n. A terse, witty, instructive saying; a maxim. [Greek apophthegma, from apophthengesthai, to speak plainly : apo-, intensive pref. about a year in a garden, with the four seasons serving as metaphors for life. Of course, one need not be a gardener to associate winter's long, cold nights with grief or spring's light with life. Ms. Norris says as much and more. Winter, when the garden "lies mute" is a time to "Accept. Be still Stay inside," she counsels. For Ms. Norris, "perhaps more goes on in the winter of the soul than any of us can imagine." Yes, there is death. But there is also for plants (and certainly for people) a "potential for the next season." On the other hand, in spring what is visible is the radiance of flowers in bloom. But in truth, she notes, spring "is an ache; bulbs cannot stay in their casing. There is the breaking out of one state into another. This is true in inner development as well." A Mystic Garden offers a glimpse of one's gnawing contradictions, Contemplating the Japanese beetles that ravage the roses in her garden and which she destroys by locking them in a Mason jar, she asks, "How can I do this? ... God's gift of life is equal." Still, she tightens the lid on the jar on the turn, ajar, as a door. See also: Jar . "Asking questions is easy. Taking responsibility is another thing," she realizes. |
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