Secret Gardeners: Growing a Community and Healing the Earth

 
4.4 (2)
 
0.0 (0)
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Secret Gardeners: Growing a Community and Healing the Earth
When three children stumble into an overgrown city yard, they end up elbows-deep in an urban gardening project that replenishes the earth and unites a community.
With the mentorship of Amy, a neighbor who is well-versed in no-dig gardening, Luna, Bianca, and Billy set to work mixing manure, spreading mulch, and sowing seeds. After a few weeks of hard work, the yard is transformed into a sustainable community garden, and more and more people are showing up to grow herbs, mushrooms, vegetables, and fruit. Just when everyone is beginning to harvest their hard-earned local food, they learn that the property is going to be cleared for a parking lot. Will this be the end of their secret garden? Or can the children rally their community to save the day?

In Secret Gardeners, journalist and beekeeper Lina Laurent collaborates with author and illustrator Maija Hurme to tell a story of community solidarity and ecological stewardship. Woven among the dreamlike illustrations are informative notes about soil life, composting, seed starting, beekeeping, wild pollinators, and more. An exquisite blend of fiction and nonfiction that will equip readers with all the information and inspiration they need to begin their own no-dig garden…and maybe even their own community project.

Editor reviews

2 reviews
No-Dig Garden
Overall rating
 
4.0
Plot
 
4.0
Characters
 
4.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
4.0
Secret Gardeners is a multi-layered story about three children who help form and protect a community garden. This book has two purposes. There is a fictional story about these children who like to spy on their neighbors. Their curiosity leads them to an abandoned house that a neighbor is using to make a no-dig garden. Together, they form a community garden and come together to keep it from being turned into a parking garage.
Around the story, the book gives important information on how to compost, create a no-dig garden, what plants grow well together, and other important urban farming tips. There are even a few pages about a bee farm the children visit. The idea of a no-dig garden, bokashi, and biochar were new concepts for me and it was interesting to learn more about them.
Overall, this book has many interesting facts and tidbits of information to help inspire readers to form their gardens. This book would work well for upper elementary readers and those interested in learning more about gardening.
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A book bursting with mystery, activism, and gardening instruction!
Overall rating
 
4.8
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
5.0
Secret Gardeners: Growing a Community and Healing the Earth was a beautiful read.

The story is fiction, starting with young children playing spy games in their neighborhood, which leads to them helping with a community garden and so much more!
In addition to the fun story, each page is teeming with facts about gardening, pollinators, and the like. Secret Gardeners is aimed at children six and up, however I think children on the younger side of this range may be overwhelmed with the amount of text on the pages.

The warm colored pencil-crayon illustrations are gorgeous. There is so much diversity shown on the pages, kids will have a fun time pointing things out.

There is more fun and educational information found in the backmatter. My children and I learned so much from reading this story, we cannot wait to implement some of these idea into our garden this year.

Highly recommend!
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