John Tradescant the Younger, gardener of Charles I, travels to the New World and the Colony of Virginia in an effort to escape the chaos of the British Civil War, only to find that more conflict awaits him at his destination.
From Publishers Weekly
In the stand-alone sequel to her Earthly Joys, Gregory follows royal gardener John Tradescant the Younger back and forth across the Atlantic between colonial Virginia and war-torn England. When John first travels to Virginia to collect exotic plants in 1638, his guide is a beautiful young Indian girl named Suckahanna. After transporting his specimens to England, he plans to return and marry her, but once at home, he learns that his father has died, leaving a letter suggesting that John marry the efficient Hester Pooks. Needing someone to care for his two children by a previous marriage, as well as for the Tradescant collection of rare objects and the Ark, the family's famous garden, John weds Hester. Meanwhile, the foolish, tyrannical King Charles I is dragging England into a civil war, and John, as a trusted servant, is pulled unwillingly into his service. To avoid having to fight for a cause he does not believe in, John returns to Virginia and Suckahanna, leaving Hester and his children back in England. In Virginia he tries to start a plantation, but having no idea how to live off the land, nears death before he is rescued by the Powhatan, Suckahanna's people. Once again John must choose sides in a war, this time between the Powhatan and the English. John is torn between them, just as he is torn between the two women in each of those separate realms. This hefty epic illuminates the conflicts of the 17th century with clear prose and a believable cast of characters, and will draw in casual readers and lovers of history alike. (Dec.) Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Set in 17th-century England and Virginia, this saga begins as John Tradescant the Younger, Charles I's gardener, sails to the New World in search of rarities for his gardens. Not only does he find exotic plants, but he also glimpses unimagined freedom. His father's death leads John to a marriage of convenience in England. Unwilling to fight for Charles I, he returns to Virginia, where he joins the Powhatan and finds a wife. But eventually John loses his place in the tribe because of his inability to kill settlers. Determined to maintain a commitment to his English family, he goes home to a country buffeted by civil war. John strives to keep his family safe, but his gift for survival ultimately rings hollow. In fact, this novel is tepid compared with its predecessor, Earthly Joys. Readers who enjoyed that volume will want its sequel, but others may find it hard to care about a character whose loyalties shift so readily and so often. -Kathy Piehl, Mankato State Univ., MN Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
In an attempt to flee his troubles in civil war^-torn England, John Tradescant the Younger, royal gardener to the king, sails to the fledgling colony of Virginia. He enlists the help of Suckahanna, a blossoming Powhatan maiden, to guide him in the forest, where he collects native plants to take back to his famed gardens. Despite his determination to remain unaffected by her, he finds himself promising to return. Back in England, however, he ends up proposing to Hester Pooks, a pragmatic woman with a sizable dowry. Suckahanna quickly becomes little more than a memory, until political upheaval once again forces John to escape and journey back to the New World. This time, he nearly dies in the wilderness. He is rescued by Suckahanna's tribe, yet still his tribulations continue as he struggles to determine where his loyalties lie. Gregory's fascinating account of one man's life in two different worlds displays a comprehensive and impressive knowledge of botany, early American colonization, and seventeenth-century royalist England. Deborah Rysso
Description:
John Tradescant the Younger, gardener of Charles I, travels to the New World and the Colony of Virginia in an effort to escape the chaos of the British Civil War, only to find that more conflict awaits him at his destination.
From Publishers Weekly
In the stand-alone sequel to her Earthly Joys, Gregory follows royal gardener John Tradescant the Younger back and forth across the Atlantic between colonial Virginia and war-torn England. When John first travels to Virginia to collect exotic plants in 1638, his guide is a beautiful young Indian girl named Suckahanna. After transporting his specimens to England, he plans to return and marry her, but once at home, he learns that his father has died, leaving a letter suggesting that John marry the efficient Hester Pooks. Needing someone to care for his two children by a previous marriage, as well as for the Tradescant collection of rare objects and the Ark, the family's famous garden, John weds Hester. Meanwhile, the foolish, tyrannical King Charles I is dragging England into a civil war, and John, as a trusted servant, is pulled unwillingly into his service. To avoid having to fight for a cause he does not believe in, John returns to Virginia and Suckahanna, leaving Hester and his children back in England. In Virginia he tries to start a plantation, but having no idea how to live off the land, nears death before he is rescued by the Powhatan, Suckahanna's people. Once again John must choose sides in a war, this time between the Powhatan and the English. John is torn between them, just as he is torn between the two women in each of those separate realms. This hefty epic illuminates the conflicts of the 17th century with clear prose and a believable cast of characters, and will draw in casual readers and lovers of history alike. (Dec.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Set in 17th-century England and Virginia, this saga begins as John Tradescant the Younger, Charles I's gardener, sails to the New World in search of rarities for his gardens. Not only does he find exotic plants, but he also glimpses unimagined freedom. His father's death leads John to a marriage of convenience in England. Unwilling to fight for Charles I, he returns to Virginia, where he joins the Powhatan and finds a wife. But eventually John loses his place in the tribe because of his inability to kill settlers. Determined to maintain a commitment to his English family, he goes home to a country buffeted by civil war. John strives to keep his family safe, but his gift for survival ultimately rings hollow. In fact, this novel is tepid compared with its predecessor, Earthly Joys. Readers who enjoyed that volume will want its sequel, but others may find it hard to care about a character whose loyalties shift so readily and so often.
-Kathy Piehl, Mankato State Univ., MN
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
In an attempt to flee his troubles in civil war^-torn England, John Tradescant the Younger, royal gardener to the king, sails to the fledgling colony of Virginia. He enlists the help of Suckahanna, a blossoming Powhatan maiden, to guide him in the forest, where he collects native plants to take back to his famed gardens. Despite his determination to remain unaffected by her, he finds himself promising to return. Back in England, however, he ends up proposing to Hester Pooks, a pragmatic woman with a sizable dowry. Suckahanna quickly becomes little more than a memory, until political upheaval once again forces John to escape and journey back to the New World. This time, he nearly dies in the wilderness. He is rescued by Suckahanna's tribe, yet still his tribulations continue as he struggles to determine where his loyalties lie. Gregory's fascinating account of one man's life in two different worlds displays a comprehensive and impressive knowledge of botany, early American colonization, and seventeenth-century royalist England. Deborah Rysso