This is a small book of big ideas written in "sharply observed detail" by a writer who honors the fusion of the domesticated and the wild. In this era of unease and uncertainty, The Accidental Garden offers elegant lines of carefully tilled ground that shows change as the caretaker of attention. I am grateful for Mr. Mabey's garden of vast literary references rooted in rich soil that invite all of us to "be interpreters, scribes, witnesses, neighbours" to what is real and true, and enduring: hands on the Earth.
—Terry Tempest Williams
This is obviously a meditation on place, but also—crucially—on time. On how we respond, practically but also morally and emotionally, to the accelerating change around us. A classic for this moment.
—Bill McKibben
In a fraught and noisy world, the quiet, observant voice is precious. The voice that says, 'Look, here is a cricket, alive and wondrous. Here is a wild rose.' There is no such voice more elegant, more to be trusted, than Richard Mabey’s.
—David Quammen
A calming reflection on the enduring resilience of nature . . . a discursive, philosophical memoir about everything from the human desire to shape nature to what Mabey calls the ambiguous experience of gardening in the midst of an environmental emergency.
—Financial Times
Delightful . . . The Accidental Garden provides an overview of Mabey's evolved thinking over a lifetime . . . Richard Mabey is the doyen of UK nature writing. —New Statesman
Inspirational . . . meditative . . . an advocate for a new non-domineering understanding of the relationship between human beings and the rest of the natural world.
—The Spectator
This is part memoir, part naturescape and part gardening book. . . . There is also something much rarer in this book: wisdom. What a treat.
—The Times (UK)
A crusade in defence of a natural world under threat . . . Mabey's powers of nature observation, and his gift for translating them into words has made [his work] both celebrated and timeless.
—The Sunday Telegraph
A lovely companion to Olivia Laing's The Garden Against Time, The Accidental Garden sees nature writer Richard Mabey on fine form. . . . The light touch in his writing and his gardening allows for a delight in the everyday wonder of nature.
—The Observer
Both instructive and exciting, often ecstatic . . . Mabey is a great, pioneering nature writer. This slim volume, packed with knowledge, insight and 'taste', is a beacon even as Mabey acknowledges that the 'minor victories' on his two acres cannot make up for the worldwide loss of biodiversity.
—The Irish Times
Part memoir, part journal, part treatise . . . this slim book captures it all. A thoughtful, lingering read.
—Geographical
These are wide-ranging debates that cover the gender-fluid nature of plants, decolonisation, migration, native/nonnative, reparations for nature through the lens of the wood, the lawn, the pond and the flowerbed. I felt like I'd spent a great afternoon, lying in the dappled shade of a garden tree, listening to Mabey muse on a life with plants.
—Gardens Illustrated
Richard Mabey writes with rare intelligence about the pleasures of the garden. This book is an eloquent and learned testimony to plants as "mordants, fixers of experience," and a sheer joy to read.
—Alison Hawthorne Deming