Publication Date: 01/08/2024 ISBN: 9781838858704 Category: Tag:

Uprooting

Marchelle Farrell

Publisher: Canongate Books
Publication Date: 01/08/2024 ISBN: 9781838858704 Category: Tag:
Paperback / Softback

£10.99

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Mr B's review

When Marchelle found herself viewing a property in rural Somerset, it was far from the potential Trinidadian relocation she had been imagining for her family. Something about the autumnal imperfection felt like home. That first winter, the soil was a desolate bed and the garden seemed laid bare. Broken heating, family illness and flooding only exacerbated her sense of vulnerability in this new home away from the warmth and family of her Caribbean childhood.
Her career break and village-lifestyle dream transformed into homeschooling, covid anxiety and being overwhelmed by a garden that she didn’t know how to manage. Over the year, she taps into the sense of intuition that her first visit sparked. She and her son grow vegetables, she brews medicinal teas, plants gifted seeds, pulls out bindweed and climate-proofs the garden stream.
As she gardens and integrates into the local community, she recognises what defines her senses of home and identity: race, key memories, generational trauma, plant and family origins, class and connection to the natural world. She finds these reflected in the stories and patterns of growth in the garden, the space becoming a beautiful place of self-reflection. – Katrina

Description

SHORTLISTED FOR THE WAINWRIGHT PRIZE

What is home? It’s a question that has troubled Marchelle Farrell for her entire life. Years ago she left Trinidad and now, uprooted once again, she heads to the peaceful English countryside – the only Black woman in her village.

Drawn to her new garden, Marchelle begins to examine the complex and emotional question of home in the context of colonialism. As her relationship with the garden deepens, she discovers that her two conflicting identities are far more intertwined than she had realised. Full of hope and healing, Uprooting is a book about finding home where we least expect it, and which invites us to reconnect to the land – and ourselves.

Publisher Review

A beautiful memoir that shows how gardens can be a place to plant our most troubled feelings, to put down roots and to find peace — KATHERINE MAY A tender book, raw in some parts . . . Farrell generously shows the reader the value of openness, considering what we have to learn from other people and species — AMANDA THOMSON * * Times Literary Supplement * * Glistening . . . This book will change how we speak of gardens, land and identity in myriad ways. An exquisite love letter [and] a rallying call * * Irish Times * * Uprooting is a potent hymn to the importance of home and a deeply thoughtful offering on what our gardens can be — ALICE VINCENT A wonderful book * * Financial Times * * Stunning . . . The power of [Farrell’s] prose, her skilful observation and her uncanny ability to weave together science and spirituality comes alive in this memoir * * NB Magazine * * Emotive . . . [Farrell] uses her plot to as a lens from which to consider place, people and planet. At times universal, at other times, strikingly personal * * Gardens Illustrated * * Can the shifting sands upon which a diasporic life is built ever begin to settle? In her search for belonging, Farrell co-creates a garden and considers the wider cultural and political landscapes that have shaped her. A beautiful entanglement of soil and soul — JINI REDDY Uprooting is at once tender and direct – as lyrical in its descriptions of home landscapes as it is scathing on the still-living legacies of colonisation. Farrell has given us a profoundly honest portrait of plants, place and the shifting of spirit wrought by migration — JESSICA J LEE In this beautiful book, Marchelle Farrell excavates the troubled legacies of colonialism and her own uprooting as she brings her Somerset garden back to life. Over the course of a year she pours love into the depleted soil and is rewarded with an abundance – of plants, insights and friendships – and, most importantly, a sense of finding home — LULAH ELLENDER

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