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'Titchmarsh is a phenomenon' Guardian 'A must for all Alan Titchmarsh fans' Woman and Home
With the engaging charm, warm humour and down-to-earth style that has made him Britain's favourite television gardener and a popular TV presenter, Alan Titchmarsh has now written 'a touch of the memoirs'.
Brilliantly evoking his 1950s Yorkshire upbringing, this, is a story of a wide-eyed childhood, of early and embarrassing encounters with girls, of unhappy school days and the eventual discovery of a talent and love for making things grow.
With warnings that he would never amount to much, he left school at fifteen to become a gardener and worked his way up to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Having picked up his spade at an early age, he went on to pick up his pen, editing the books of his hero Percy Thrower, and finally getting a chance to put his own words in print, and present his own gardening programmes.
Few gardeners can boast of meeting Nelson Mandela and Bette Davis, Julia Roberts...
Tovább
Fülszöveg
'Titchmarsh is a phenomenon' Guardian 'A must for all Alan Titchmarsh fans' Woman and Home
With the engaging charm, warm humour and down-to-earth style that has made him Britain's favourite television gardener and a popular TV presenter, Alan Titchmarsh has now written 'a touch of the memoirs'.
Brilliantly evoking his 1950s Yorkshire upbringing, this, is a story of a wide-eyed childhood, of early and embarrassing encounters with girls, of unhappy school days and the eventual discovery of a talent and love for making things grow.
With warnings that he would never amount to much, he left school at fifteen to become a gardener and worked his way up to the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Having picked up his spade at an early age, he went on to pick up his pen, editing the books of his hero Percy Thrower, and finally getting a chance to put his own words in print, and present his own gardening programmes.
Few gardeners can boast of meeting Nelson Mandela and Bette Davis, Julia Roberts and the Queen. Fewer still can claim to be best-selling novelists. But whether he is writing about a visit to the Palace, or giving 'Pretty Woman' a gardening book, Alan Titchmarsh recounts his tales of 'a life on earth' with wry amusement and gentle self- deprecation.
While others kiss and tell, Alan Titchmarsh smiles and passes by, taking notes along the way, and wondering why the heck it happened to him.
Vissza