Classic Pleasures: The Gardening Catalogue

It was Agatha Christie who first introduced me to the gardening catalogue. Being Agatha Christie, she naturally made it a harbinger of sudden and mysterious death (you’ll have to read The Thirteen Problems to find out how).

Of course, gardening catalogues were nothing new in 1932, when the book came out. The first ever was, according to Wikipedia, produced by an Englishman in 1667, back when Charles II was ruling Britain, Louis “l’etat c’est moi” XIV ruling France, and the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb (son of Mumtaz Mahal, as in Taj Mahal) ruling the Indian subcontinent.

Sweerts florilegium
Continue & Comment

Blurbs, Jungles and Neck-Biting

BlurbingHave you ever decided to read a book because of its blurb?

Have you ever read a book which “has that Certain Something which makes you want to crawl through thirty miles of dense tropical jungle and bite somebody in the neck”?

If so, which jungle, and who did you bite?