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Liza Ketchum

Author of Where the Great Hawk Flies

19+ Works 572 Members 30 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Liza Ketchum

Where the Great Hawk Flies (2005) 99 copies
Newsgirl (2009) 95 copies
West Against the Wind (1987) 73 copies
The Gold Rush (The West) (1614) 61 copies
Fire in the Heart (1989) 45 copies
Twelve Days in August (1993) 27 copies
Blue Coyote (1997) 26 copies
Begin with a Bee (2021) 18 copies
The Ghost of Lost Island (1991) 18 copies
Allergic to My Family (1992) 14 copies
Good-Bye, Sammy (1989) 14 copies
The Last Garden: A Memoir (2023) 6 copies

Associated Works

On The Edge: Stories At The Brink (2000) — Contributor — 62 copies

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female

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80's(?) YA book, Pioneers in Name that Book (October 2016)

Reviews

This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
The Last Garden, by Liza Ketchum is a memoir told through the author’s recollections of gardens and plants that have special meaning for her. Each chapter is titled with the name of a specific plant and is beautifully illustrated with botanical drawings. An engaging storyteller, Ketchum describes her love of gardening as being threaded through five generations. She tells stories of her grandparents, parents, children, and grandchildren. Cuttings are taken and plants are frequently dug up and transplanted during her moves to new homes throughout her life. Her story begins and ends in Vermont. The Last Garden is a celebration of the cycle of seasons, gardens, and of the author’s life itself.… (more)
 
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bethnv | 4 other reviews | Aug 24, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Gardening is an emotional and deeply personal part of Liza Ketchum’s memories. Her book The Last Garden is a moving and poignant recollection of the people and places she has known throughout her life and how she is connected to them by the gardens, fields, streams and woods encompassing them. A plant is not just a plant, it is a link to a specific time in her life: the beets she grew at camp as a teenager, the pots of geraniums she carried with her through many of life’s changes, and Alice’s roses planted at the front door of her home in Vermont. What a lovely way to document a life. This book is surprisingly charming and one I’m happy to recommend.… (more)
 
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themagiciansgirl | 4 other reviews | Aug 21, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This book arrived in time for a period in summer when I needed to slow down due to the heat. I haven't gardened since 2019 due to health and I miss it.

Liza Ketchum's book, The Last Garden, resonated with me as I've been going back in my mind to other gardens from my past lately.

This book is perfect for an simple read that leads to thoughtful moments. As the author reflects on the passage of time both in our lives and in our gardens, it is easy to stray to your own past and think those deep, slow thoughts. I found it a comforting walk in the past and not depressing as some books like this are. It is more of a celebration than a memorial.

I know I may not have another garden of my own and I very much appreciated the view of the author in a similar circumstance. She recounts both garden spaces and the gardeners as well as her favorite plant friends and why they are worth discussing. There is something to be learned of plants and people here.

Definitely worth reading.
… (more)
1 vote
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ShawnMarie | 4 other reviews | Aug 1, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
A nice, quiet, reflective little book. I thought momentarily from the title that the focus would be the garden the author planted in what she felt were her final years- but really, it glances back to many different gardens she had throughout her life. From ones she barely participated in as a child, to those of family members and neighbors she visited, but mostly the gardens she planted and tended in various homes she lived in through her adult years. Each chapter has a loose focus on a certain plant or flower, telling what it meant to her, what family member or friend it reminds her of, how cuttings or shoots of it were handed down through the family or among gardening friends. I expected to glean little bits of gardening advice and lore, but what more I picked up on was the closeness of family among many moves and restarts, new beginnings all over again. The comfort that came in growing things from the soil, that familiar work with hands in the dirt. Simply joys in seeing birds and butterflies visit her plants, reassurance in knowing she’d done some good to support the natural world, when all else around might seem to be falling apart with misuse, pollution and global warming. I felt a bit distracted throughout, not always following closely who the various people she spoke of were, and missing more depth and detail about the actual gardens (I could well have read this book were it twice as long)- but for what it was, very nice. The finely drawn, black-and-white illustrations by Bobbi Angell are lovely.… (more)
1 vote
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jeane | 4 other reviews | Jul 29, 2023 |

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Works
19
Also by
1
Members
572
Popularity
#43,783
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
30
ISBNs
42

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