- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- ISBN: 9781529979725
- Length: 304 pages
- Price: £11.99
Tiny Gardens Everywhere
Format:
Pre-order:
In the heart of bustling European and American cities lies an overlooked yet vibrant corner of resilience and ingenuity: our gardens. Over the past three hundred years, from pre-Industrial England to modern-day Washington, via the Paris Commune, Barrackia in pre-war Berlin and contemporary Amsterdam, ordinary people, working with each other and with nature, cultivated life in the unlikeliest of places. These tiny gardens, often born from necessity and shaped by precarity, migration and environmental crisis, thrived by recycling nutrients, remedying contaminated soil and transforming how we think about our relationship to the earth.
Tiny Gardens Everywhere is a hymn to the most fertile agriculture in recorded human history, showing that it occurred not on farms – the product of gigantic exertions of fossil fuels and technology – but with little effort in small garden beds. And the resourcefulness, intuition and inherited methods of their growers accomplished many of today’s sustainability goals in producing local, diverse and organic food.
Acclaimed historian Kate Brown brings to the fore the long and battered story of gardeners and their gardens, asking what happens when these urban Edens are not seen as retreats from the city but become part of its social fabric, alive with histories of migration, conflict and resistance. This is a book about land, but also about housing, trauma, repair and the quiet revolutions that begin when someone plants a seed in unloved ground.
Tiny Gardens Everywhere is a hymn to the most fertile agriculture in recorded human history, showing that it occurred not on farms – the product of gigantic exertions of fossil fuels and technology – but with little effort in small garden beds. And the resourcefulness, intuition and inherited methods of their growers accomplished many of today’s sustainability goals in producing local, diverse and organic food.
Acclaimed historian Kate Brown brings to the fore the long and battered story of gardeners and their gardens, asking what happens when these urban Edens are not seen as retreats from the city but become part of its social fabric, alive with histories of migration, conflict and resistance. This is a book about land, but also about housing, trauma, repair and the quiet revolutions that begin when someone plants a seed in unloved ground.
Details
All editions
- Hardback 2026
- Ebook 2026