Alice Vincent is a journalist and the author of three books, including Rootbound: Rewilding a Life, which was longlisted for the Wainwright Prize and named as one of the books of 2020 by the Financial Times and the Independent. A self-taught gardener, Alice is a columnist for Gardens Illustrated and writes for titles including Vogue and the New Statesman. She has been documenting her gardening online since 2015 and has since launched a newsletter and podcast. She lives in South London. @noughticulture | @alice_emily
'Why Women Grow shows the beauty and grit of tending the soil in
difficult times. Alice Vincent shows us that the cure for
uncertainty is to get mud under our nails' - KATHERINE MAY, author
of WINTERING
'Alice's writing is sublime. Gentle yet certain, warm yet fierce.
Why Women Grow is an exquisite exploration of our many womanhoods
and the reasons why some of us find our steadiness and solace in
our relationship to the earth. I adored it.' - CLAIRE RATINON,
author of UNEARTHED
'Alice Vincent has written something wonderful. Why Women Grow is a
book that not only presents us with the beauty of the earth but
asks one of the most fundamental questions to the human condition:
what does it mean to create? I loved the way she wrote about the
ambivalent power of the maternal question. I was delighted to
travel around the country with her, digging into people's lives,
private spaces and plants. We need more books about women, wombs
and our role in the world; Alice has done that with charm, humour
and an impressive depth of knowledge' - NELL FRIZZELL, author of
THE PANIC YEARS
'With an infectious curiosity and openheartedness, Alice Vincent
delves into the complex and fascinating reasons women tend their
gardens. She illuminates stories of defiance, creativity and
resilience as she excavates what it means to be a woman on the cusp
of a new life stage' - LULAH ELLENDER, author of GROUNDING
'Praise for Rootbound:Reading this book is like breathing fresh
spring air. Rootbound is achingly honest and earthily good, a
beautiful hymn to wild hope, strength and tenderness, in nature and
in ourselves. I loved it.' - Charlotte Runcie, author of Salt on
Your Tongue
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