The $64 Tomato by William Alexander - ISBN: 9781565125575
Paperback
“How one man nearly lost his sanity, spent a fortune, and endured an existential crisis in the quest for the perfect garden”–Cover.

The $64 Tomato

How One Man Nearly Lost His Sanity, Spent a Fortune, and Endured an Existential Crisis in the Quest for the Perfect Garden

  • Paperback

    304 pages

  • Release Date

    2 March 2007

Summary

Bill Alexander had no idea that his simple dream of having a vegetable garden and small orchard in his backyard would lead him into life-and-death battles with groundhogs, webworms, weeds, and weather; midnight expeditions in the dead of winter to dig up fresh thyme; and skirmishes with neighbors who feed the vermin (i.e., deer). Not to mention the vacations that had to be planned around the harvest, the near electrocution of the tree man, the limitations of his own middle-aged body, and the …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781565125575
ISBN-10:1565125576
Author:William Alexander
Publisher:Workman Publishing
Imprint:Algonquin Books
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:304
Release Date:2 March 2007
Weight:308g
Dimensions:21mm x 139mm x 209mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“Gardening as extreme sport… . Engaging, well paced and informative.”–The New York Times Book Review

About The Author

William Alexander

William Alexander, the author of two critically acclaimed books, lives in New York’s Hudson Valley. By day the IT director at a research institute, he made his professional writing debut at the age of fifty-three with a national bestseller about gardening, The $64 Tomato. His second book, 52 Loaves, chronicled his quest to bake the perfect loaf of bread, a journey that took him to such far-flung places as a communal oven in Morocco and an abbey in France, as well as into his own backyard to grow, thresh, and winnow wheat. The Boston Globe called Alexander “wildly entertaining,” the New York Times raved that “his timing and his delivery are flawless,” and the Minneapolis Star Tribune observed that “the world would be a less interesting place without the William Alexanders who walk among us.” A 2006 Quill Book Awards finalist, Alexander won a Bert Greene Award from the IACP for his article on bread, published in Saveur magazine. A passion bordering on obsession unifies all his writing. He has appeared on NPR’s Morning Edition and at the National Book Festival in Washington DC and is a frequent contributor to the New York Times op-ed pages, where he has opined on such issues as the Christmas tree threatening to ignite his living room and the difficulties of being organic. Now, in Flirting with French, he turns his considerable writing talents to his perhaps less considerable skills: becoming fluent in the beautiful but maddeningly illogical French language.

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