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How does my garden grow?

Charlotte Mendelson on her first non-fiction book

September 22, 2016 11:48
22092016 looking up
3 min read

I know; I'm as surprised as you are. If, in my novel-writing twenties, you'd told me I'd one day write non-fiction, I'd have guessed the subtitle might be: "My Life in Baked Goods" or possibly "Unchallenging European Capital Cities I Have Loved" but definitely not, under any circumstances, the one printed on the book now lying on my desk: "A novelist, an obsession, a laughably small excuse for a vegetable garden." Yet here I am: amazed to be a novelist but much more shocked to be a passionate gardener.

Although I know you'll tell me I'm wrong, I don't think of gardening as a very Jewish activity. We, the people of the book, have many talents: reading, eating, arguing. What, in the main, we're not so good at is feats of practical skill and spacial awareness, particularly outdoors. Like camping, ugh, growing even the easiest fruit and vegetables is a time-consuming and muddy business. One must balance on step-ladders while holding sharp tools; work out how to attach flimsy netting to wobbly bamboo canes; sit about in the rain in allotments, not talking, with a thermos. Mightn't these activities be better left to professionals, preferably those employed by Marks and Spencer? Wouldn't we all be more comfortable inside?

Probably. I bear the scars of almost a decade of horticultural cluelessness; I have wasted time and money attempting to growing tropical vegetables in a tiny (North London, obviously) garden. I'm proud of having stuffed my six square metres of grotty urban soil and a few pots with over a hundred kinds of unusual edible crops: gorgeous flowers, herbs from Japan and Mexico and Sicily which transform my cooking.

I love gazing at pea-tendrils, or the vast viney leaves of "Tromboncino", an easily grown summer squash with a shape like a… never mind. The smells of damp soil and tomato-leaves delight me. I am at my happiest covered in home-made compost, cooing over my wriggly compost-worms like a deranged farmer. But let's be honest; the harvests are laughable. The soil is polluted. I have novels to write and a family to tend. What's wrong with the sofa?