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Winner of the Gold Award as Best Written Book of 2008 from the Garden Writers Association of America!![]() © 2007 Aurelia C. Scott - All rights reserved
Published by Algonquin Books "What lengths we go to in our lives for plants! Not just rose nuts, but gardeners everywhere will love this book. I found myself laughing out loud and nodding with sage understanding -- sometimes at the same time." - Bailey White, NPR commentator "Q-tips, cotton balls, and hazmat suits: welcome to the world of competitive rose gardening. Aurelia Scott's engaging journey into the underbelly of rose exhibitions will leave you wondering, Are these hobbists bloomin' nuts, or simply having more fun that the rest of us?" - William Alexander, author of The $64 Tomato "Aurelia Scott has nurtured a wonderful bloom: a rose book for roasarians and people who can't tell a bourbon from a tea. Reading this delightful, fun story of obsession made me look anew at our backyard and ask, Where's my gardening shovel?" - Mark Obmascik, author of The Big Year: A Tale of Man, Nature, and Fowl Obsession OTHERWISE NORMAL PEOPLE from Algonquin Books was published on May 18, 2007. We encourage you to support your local independent bookseller. To find your nearest bookseller, visit Booksense.
"Ms. Scott writes beautifully and compassionately about the rose-afflicted. Fascinating facts emerge in her profiles, such as how the world of roses is dominated by men, how rose aficionados hold more meetings than any other group, how old roses (those hybridized before 1867) have virtually no value to rosaholics, how hard it is to cross red roses and how rattlesnakes use rose bushes to shed their skins. Otherwise Normal People offers no remedies. It also (alas) has no index – so keep a pencil handy to mark passages you will want to revisit or read aloud to a friend." Read more of Bill Scheick's review online at the Dallas Morning News website. The Washington Post 8/ "Scott leads readers through the slow, diabolical transition that takes 'otherwise normal people' from hobbyist to serious grower, putting rose-mania in perspective for the rosarian and the amateur. She has a light, humorous style but emphasizes that it's a serious discipline. After following Scott's journey to competitive rose-growing in the unlikely location of Portland, Maine, you will never look at a rose the same way again. The lists of rose varieties and definitions are invaluable to readers." The Houston Chronicle 8/ "This fun read — and note, it really is a read, with no photos — offers the rose lover's equivalent of the film Best in Show. Imagine a convention room full of cheerful, mostly graying folks who grow roses as an extreme sport. Scott, who says she's not the least bit competitive herself, observes this fascinating subculture lovingly as some of its stars strive to amass crystal bowls, ribbons and certificates — they don't do it for money — from the American Rose Society. Typically, competitive rosarians obsess about exhibiting Hybrid Teas — since that's the only variety eligible for the ARS' top prizes: Queen, King, Princess and Best of Show. Their routine will amuse lazy gardeners. They maintain a critically timed program of feeding, pruning, disbudding, deadheading and chemical spraying; devise makeshift bloom protectors; and spend hours grooming blossoms to produce fat, perfectly formed specimens just in time for show days. You don't have to aspire to showing the world's best-ever 'Peace' to enjoy the ride, and Scott manages to sprinkle plenty of fascinating rose history into her brew." The San Jose Mercury News 6/ "Aurelia C. Scott spent a year of her life being seduced by a bunch of truly obsessed people - a small but ardent fraternity of folks who grow roses in great abundance not necessarily for their beauty or scent but to nurture elusive prize-winning blooms. Think dog-show fanatics in the documentary "Best in Show" or crossword puzzle devotees in "Wordplay." Scrabble geeks got their 15 minutes in the book "Word Freak." Now we meet "Otherwise Ordinary People," freakishly competitive gardeners who devote a remarkable amount of time to pruning, spraying, coaxing and coddling the "queen of flowers." Not content to sit back and smell the roses, these gardeners then clip their most promising blossoms and carefully tote them by car or plane to the National Rose Show, held twice a year. There, more hours are spent huddled over these fragile creatures, fussing with elaborate grooming rituals designed to nudge a bud to its proper degree of openness at the perfect moment. The subtitle of Scott's book - "Inside the Thorny World of Competitive Rose Gardening" - hints at the riches inside. And you don't need to know a polyantha from a rugosa to enjoy the run-up to judgment hour, accompanied by fascinating snippets of rose lore and more than a little armchair psychology. Scott's cast of characters includes a woman who dresses in Tyvek coveralls, rubber boots and a shower cap to douse her hundreds of roses in a cocktail of fungicide and insecticide dispensed via a 14-gallon gizmo called the Spray Boss. Then there are the men - and yes, most competitive rose growers are men - who seem as caught up in the gear they dream up to manage their hobby as the flowers they're producing..." Read my e-mail interview with reviewer Holly Hayes online at the Mercury News website. The New York Times 4/ "The blissful victims Aurelia C. Scott depicts in 'Otherwise Normal People: Inside the Thorny World of Competitive Rose Gardening' are, to put it bluntly, goners. There is no helping the patient who constructs an elaborate carrying case lined with dense foam and wooden racks to transporting roses to conentions, or builds his own power sprayer, or amasses a collection of Waterford crystal trophies..." Read more of Holly Brubach's review online at the New York Times website. |