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Joan Marble

    Notes from a Roman Terrace
    Ein Garten in Italien
    • Notes from a Roman Terrace

      • 304 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden

      A delightful travel memoir of contemporary life in Rome, by the author of the well-loved Notes from an Italian Garden .Joan Marble has lived in a sixteenth-century Roman palazzo apartment with husband Robert, a sculptor, for over forty years. A lifetime of mingling with the citizens of Rome and pottering about on her beloved terrace above the city rooftops has resulted in this warm and witty book.Highly personal and brimming with anecdote, history and insight, Joan’s experience of Rome and Romans is infected by her contagious fascination for plants, a hobby she shares every week with the Women’s Gardening Club of Rome. She includes an insider’s view of Italian fellow gardening-obsessives, and an authoritative view of famous Italian Gardens. Woven into her gardening tales are her informed views on everyday life in the city; of partying, politics and popes; of bicycle thieves and cat-catchers, and how to deal with those friends-of-friends who arrive so regularly in Rome with nowhere to stay. Tales abound of the expat community, and the illustrious writers and aristocrats with whom the author, as a journalist, keeps company. At the same time, Joan infuses her memoir with an affection for her plants, scattering tips and personal stories of how to keep them alive.Imbued with a special feel for history and human observation, this idiosyncratic study of Joan’s beloved home will delight armchair travelers and gardeners everywhere.

      Notes from a Roman Terrace2004
      3,4
    • Ein Garten in Italien

      • 335 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden

      Vor dreißig Jahren kauften Joan Marble und ihr Bildhauer-Ehemann Robert Cook ein unauffälliges Grundstück in Lazio, dem Gebiet nördlich von Rom, das einst die Heimat der alten Etrusker war. Sie bauten ein Haus und schufen einen wunderbaren Garten. Doch es war nicht alles einfach, da sie auf eine gewisse blanke Unverständnis vonseiten der einheimischen Bevölkerung stießen.

      Ein Garten in Italien2000
      3,0