The book leads you: chapter by chapter, step by step. So first Jinny explains her own journey into garden design. Then the book is divided into sections, the first being 'Seeing', which is very much different from looking. , then moving onto Understanding, Structuring, Harmonizing, Rooting and Liberating. Each chapter within these sections expands a little further Jinny's philosophy and knowledge. The thread running through the book is that in order to design, one has to understand and really into the heart of the land to be transformed. Then you can strip away what you need to and rebuild to reveal the new transformed landscape. There is also a case study at the end of the sections. These case studies illustrate perfectly the points being made and also show the breadth of Jinny's work. The garden in Kenya case study particularly took my breath away.
You will learn about researching, planning, structure and context. There is an extensive section on different types of plants which is not a catalog of 'use this specific plant here', but is rather 'this is how you can use this type of plant.' I really liked this approach.
Probably at this point I should mention the photography in the book. It is by several different photographers and it is exceptional. Light and color are particularly captured well.
This is not a 'how to' book, despite every aspect about design is covered. It is a book to give inspiration and one to make the reader think. I wonder if there are two thoughtful gardeners being referred to in the title, the one writing and the one reading.
I enjoyed reading this book, it is, as the sub-title states, an intelligent approach to garden design. It is not a quick read as I wanted to linger on the pages, I wanted to properly understand what was being explained. If you are interested in the philosophy behind garden design then this book is for you.
The Thoughtful Gardener is published by Jacqui Small