Christopher Lloyd (Christo) was one of the greatest
English gardeners of the twentieth century, perhaps the
finest plantsman of them all. His creation is the garden
at Great Dixter in East Sussex, and it is a tribute to
his vision and achievement that, after his death in
2006, the Heritage Lottery Fund made a grant of GBP4
million to help preserve it for the nation. This
enjoyable and revealing book - the first biography of
Christo - is also the story of Dixter from 1910 to 2006,
a unique unbroken history of one English house and one
English garden spanning a century. It was Christo's
father, Nathaniel, who bought the medieval manor at
Dixter and called in the fashionable Edwardian
architect, Lutyens, to rebuild the house and lay out the
garden. And it was his mother, Daisy, who made the first
wild garden in the meadows there. Christo was born at
Dixter in 1921. Apart from boarding school, war service
and a period at horticultural college, he spent his
whole life there, constantly re-planting and enriching
the garden, while turning out landmark books and
exhaustive journalism.Opinionated, argumentative and
gloriously eccentric, he changed the face of English
gardening through his passions for meadow gardening,
dazzling colours and thorough husbandry. As the baby of
a family of six - five boys and a girl - Christo was
stifled by his adoring mother. Music-loving and
sports-hating, he knew the Latin names of plants before
he was eight. This fascinating book reveals what made
Christo tick by examining his relationships with his
generous but scheming mother, his like-minded friends
(such as gardeners Anna Pavord and Beth Chatto) and his
colleagues (including his head gardener, Fergus Garrett,
a plantsman in Christo's own mould). |
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