Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Flowers and their friends - cover

Flowers and their friends

Margaret Warner Morley

Publisher: Good Press

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

In "Flowers and Their Friends," Margaret Warner Morley elegantly explores the intricate relationships within the floral kingdom and their broader ecological significance. Written in a lyrical prose style, this work is both informative and poetic, reflecting Morley's deep appreciation for nature. The book immerses the reader in vivid descriptions of various flowers while highlighting the symbiotic relationships they maintain with insects, birds, and the environment, situating it within the broader literary context of naturalism and environmental literature that flourished in the early 20th century. Morley's observations blend scientific detail with an almost reverent spirituality, inviting readers to contemplate the beauty and complexity of nature. Margaret Warner Morley was not only a writer but also a naturalist deeply influenced by her experiences in the natural world. Growing up in a rural setting, her passion for nature led her to study biology and to pursue a career in writing about the intricate wonders of flora and fauna. Her background in observational study and her role as a woman scientist at a time when female voices were often marginalized contributed greatly to the insightful and empowering perspectives found within this book. "Flowers and Their Friends" is a must-read for anyone interested in botany, ecology, or simply the beauty of the world around us. Morley's blend of narrative and science offers a rare glimpse into the interconnectedness of life, making this work both an educational resource and an aesthetic delight. For nature lovers and scholarly readers alike, this book serves not only as a celebration of flowers but also as a call to appreciate and protect the delicate web of relationships they support.
Available since: 03/02/2025.
Print length: 230 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Shetland Fine Lace Knitting - Recreating Patterns from the Past - cover

    Shetland Fine Lace Knitting -...

    Carola Christiansen

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The craft of Shetland knitted lace-making involves fine openwork knitting, used to make shawls, stoles and collars. These were considered luxury items because of their fineness, complexity of design and the length of time required to make them. This book reveals the historical knitted lace swatches held by The Shetland Amenity Trust, together with instructions for how to recreate them. Each lace pattern includes written knitting instructions, a photograph of the original sample, together with a photograph of a modern knitted swatch, together with the knitting chart. The book is a must for anyone with an interest in lace knitting, historical knitting, knitwear design and the Shetland Islands.
    Show book
  • Wild and Wonderful - Around the World with Éanna - cover

    Wild and Wonderful - Around the...

    Éanna Ní Lamhna

    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
    Glow-in-the-dark owls, eggs boiling in Icelandic hot pools, the gangster tactics of the devil's coach-horse beetle … Éanna Ní Lamhna has seen them all! 
    Éanna explores the wonders of our wild world, from a safari in Tanzania to the cloud forests of Costa Rica, from rat-hunting in Canada to whale watching in New Zealand. She draws on her experience as a diver to tell of face-to-face encounters with fascinating fan worms, elusive sea hares and a murderous crab, and rings the alarm bells on the environmental challenges facing us. 
    Éanna also recounts with cheerful relish the pitfalls and delights of being a broadcaster and a scientist. Sure why would anyone want to be anything else?  
    Show book
  • Dovetails - The Hand Tools Approach - cover

    Dovetails - The Hand Tools Approach

    Mitch Peacock

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    For centuries, dovetail joints have been instrumental in holding wood together. Though modern mass-production of furniture means that most such joints are now machine-cut instead, there is still a place for traditional hand-cut dovetails in low-volume, high-quality furniture making and, increasingly, in the work of the hobbyist woodworker. Dovetails is a comprehensive guide to the hand-tool preparation of dovetail joinery. Containing over 400 photographs and diagrams, it details how to make 28 dovetail joints, from the simplest example through to complicated puzzle joints.
    Show book
  • Foraged and Recycled Art - cover

    Foraged and Recycled Art

    Clare Youngs

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Over 35 creative ways to transform recycled and natural materials into stunning projects.
    With ideas for makes from gifts and stationery to homewares and decorations, this collection shows you how to craft innovative projects from foraged and upcycled materials. The 35 designs include a festive gilded leaf garland, pretty seedpod coasters, floral paper bags and an appliqué wall hanging. Expert maker Clare Youngs guides you through all the techniques you'll need, showing you how to use a wide range of materials including fabric and paper off-cuts as well as natural elements such as twigs, flowers and pebbles. With just a few inexpensive supplies and tools to get you started, you'll soon be making beautiful works of art and developing your creativity while being kind to the planet.
    Show book
  • The Turpentine Tree - cover

    The Turpentine Tree

    Lynne Hjelmgaard

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Turpentine Tree is an enduring symbol of memory, fragile but enduring the passage of time and still persisting: in the title poem, Lynne Hjelmgaard describes it 'a coppery faux god / with wildly twisted branches'. It might slip into the void, but here it is for now 'flying into the eye of the storm.' Hjelmgaard employs strong, sensuous imagery to capture moments from across her remarkable life.
    These are portraits of family, friends and relationships – of Hjelmgaard's uprooted life, including a life at sea, the subsequent displacement, widowhood and search for connections. Often the remembrances in poems are sweet-bitter, recalling friends and lovers lost, including the writer's late partner Dannie Abse. These explorations of loss are extremely moving, but the poems also communicate the value of a rich bank of memories which range around from spectating on a girl being punished at camp ('Summer Camp'), a Florida roadtrip with friends ('1969'), or an 'Evening Flight from Copenhagen.' Very often the speakers are in transit, travelling through, and so the poems hold onto intense, lucid or epiphanic moments.
    There's an honesty, easiness and at times humour about the language. Vulnerability and strength walk side by side to give an extraordinary depth of experience for the reader. There's a visitation from her dead lover; her husband's spirit is safe in her wardrobe in a plastic bag; her father's ghost is on a WWII battleship in Norfolk Harbour and later waits for her in a crowd of strangers at Miami airport.
    These snapshots are sometimes based on real photographs, or at other times are imaginary photographs; Hjelmgaard questions 'Did we really exist? Yes – / the photograph answers' ('The Photograph Answers'). Threaded throughout all these memories is the gorgeous vividness of nature – the sea, animals, and creatures – which take speakers out of human concerns to a more connected relation with the world. The Turpentine Tree is about intangible presences which open up memory and move beyond it, towards a universal interconnectedness.
    How far back does grief go? What is lost, what can be found? Is memory transferred between us without words, years later, is the unsayable felt? 
    (from 'On the Atlantic Coast of Spain')
    'Lynne Hjelmgaard is truthful yet unrepentant. An American poet, determined to be alive.' - Robert Minhinnick, author of Diary of the Last Man
    'These poems keep a distinctive balance between distance and closeness – a  wide span across decades, between continents, hand in hand with crisp small moments that encapsulate a life. Closeness, too, in the intimacies at the heart of this collection, held with a lucid sensitivity that's never sentimental, staying true to individual relationships while melting into universal themes of love, loss, letting go and celebration.' -   Philip Gross, author of The Thirteenth Angel
    'Who is this person from so many places? Lynne Hjelmgaard grew up in Stuyvesant Town NYC, lived in Denmark, in Paris, in England, in the Caribbean -- did she really sail on a boat? What is she telling us? Everything she carries within, at any time. A unique, unusual life reflected on in poems of intimate address to the reader/companion. Delicate, beautiful, detailed from an amazing memory. Childhood, womanhood, children, aging, loves, mixed as everything is in the one body/mind. Tender and magical.' - Alice Notley, author of For the Ride
    Show book
  • Grabbing A Slice Of "Minnesota Nice" - cover

    Grabbing A Slice Of "Minnesota...

    Lucas LaMont

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Minnesota has a code, don't cha know? 
    Knowing this code is essential for living in the state famous for an accent only the Coen Brothers could replicate. But if you only focused on the accents in Fargo, you might have missed the nuance. 
    After all, there has to be some reason Minnesotans live in a state where winter lasts six months out of the year. What is it? We call it "Minnesota Nice." It permeates all aspects of life, including the way we talk, what we eat, how we entertain guests, the way we practice our faith, and how we enjoy the great outdoors. 
    Do you want to know more—or better yet, know someone in your life who should? Grab a copy today so you can have something to set your coffee mug on. Plus, it's thick enough you'll really annihilate that fly that won't stop buzzing around.
    Show book