hearts-a-bustin

After Eden, Cain killed Abel.  That sentence has been going through my mind since the murders at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh.  More accurately, that sentence has been lurking in my mind, shadowing my mood since 27 October.  Initially I thought those five words might be the beginning of a poem, but the …

late and soon

At this month’s meeting of the Blount County Master Gardeners a fellow member gently, almost embarrassingly, tapped me on the shoulder and said, “I really miss your posts in After Eden.”  She thought I had stopped writing.  I have not stopped.  But I have not written--at least I have not written recently for After Eden. …

my garden, my art

The need for this post came upon me as I was looking around the late winter garden at the lake.  It was just a few weeks ago in early March.  Everything was rather bare.  Mottled green and maroon Trilliums were starting to open, pale gray-green Bellwort (Uvularia grandiflora) was beginning to bend softly over to …

botanic Oxbridge

I am a medievalist.  I spent my academic career teaching medieval literature, especially the Middle English literature of the 14th century, and its appropriation for a vast array of artistic, social, and commercial causes by the 19th, 20th, and 21stcenturies.  I like Oxford.  Its spires, narrow streets, and granite and limestone walls feel familiar, warm, …

bloom and seed

Being the holiday season, I thought that a post on garden books would be a timely plan.  And I had three very different, but good, books chosen.  Lorraine Harrison’s, How to Read Gardens: A Crash Course in Garden Appreciation, was the first.  A quick read with beautiful photos, the compact volume is filled with basic, …