The Lost Garden by Helen Humphreys

The Lost Garden

Helen Humphreys

Though The Lost Garden, the third novel by Kingston-based writer Helen Humphreys, is set in England in 1941, it takes place far from the bombs of the Blitz. Gwen Davis, a sad, shy employee of the Royal Horticultural Society who’s spent much of her adulthood studying diseased parsnips, leaves London to lead young members of the Women’s Land Army on an estate in the Devon countryside. She arrives amid great confusion, but soon realizes that she’s inherited a gaggle of Land Girls who are less interested in growing potatoes for the war effort than in consorting with the Canadian soldiers stationed nearby. Gwen is not a natural leader, but she does find allies in Jane, a wan but caustic young woman whose boyfriend is missing in action, and Captain Raley, a dashing Canadian officer prone to quoting from the poems of Tennyson. Gwen also discovers a garden planted by someone who worked on the estate during its grandest years, before World War I decimated an earlier generation of English gardeners. The events that follow prove that the melancholy narrator is wrong to believe, as she says early in the story, that ‘the stupidity of vegetables is preferable to the unpredictability of people.’

The Lost Garden is written in a style very much informed by Gwen’s favourite writer, Virginia Woolf, who herself has just gone missing as the novel begins. Although some dialogue teeters on the edge between lyrical and overripe, the action builds to a lovely finale that merges all of the novel’s disparate elements into something with genuine emotional resonance. Like the roses that fascinate the novel’s heroine, The Lost Garden‘s poise and beauty are complemented by its surprisingly hardy nature. –Jason Anderson


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Details

ISBN 2005115
Genre Fiction
Copyright Date 2002
Publication Date 18-Jul-02
Publisher Harper Collins Canada
Format Hardcover
No. of Pages 183
Language English
Rating NotRated
BookID 7572

Author: LFWBooks