Edward Flaherty–author of Tangier Gardens

Published in Aug 2022 Landscape Middle East

–>✅Landscape Middle East, August 2022 issue, featured my reflections on a 50 year landscape architecture career in the USA (California and Florida), the UK, Switzerland, Morocco, Turkey, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates.✅<–

Experiences in these countries, where, with my family, I have lived, are the foundation of the novels I write.

Landscape Middle East, in that same August 2022 issue, published a review of my book, Tangier Gardens.

Published in Aug 2022 Landscape Middle East

–>✅Please visit my book page on Amazon, buy Tangier Gardens and leave a review.✅<–

Genres? Nature and Weird Fiction

I am on a hunt.

For genre, for references.

You all know I write about landscape. In my own words, landscape that takes you to the foggy edge where normal transforms into paranormal.

I have only one writer who inspired me–Algernon Blackwood. He showed respect for the observable landscape. He also felt another side of landscape–its power. Its indefinable power that, in a fleeting second, can overwhelm.

I don’t copy him. But my experience in the landscape is similar. Tangier Gardens is about a young man just making his first discoveries beyond the foggy edge of normal. Nature is like that–if you let it.

If we look at nature, in a traditional sense, we see it as a source of human inspiration.

What about landscape? Landscape is the canvas upon which nature sits.

What about landscape architecture? Now that is confusing. It is a modern profession, that in my opinion, mistakenly moves natural elements around, often losing the traditional inspirational quality of nature. Failure.

So, in Tangier Gardens, the young man, CJ, tries to find how he, as a student of landscape architecture, can impart the inspiration of nature into his landscape design. Difficult. Tons of adminstrative regulations that bind nature into some kind of measurable pop experience. Not fun or helpful.

So I turn to a Algernon Blackwood aficionado, Eugene Thacker, who writes about Blackwood’s approach to nature and landscape:

If we are to call Blackwood a naturalist, then we must do so with caution, for his sublime awe before the mysteries of nature is always coupled with an acute awareness of the indifference of what we dutifully tag as “nature.” His novella, “The Willows”, suggests something different. Perhaps what we call the “supernatural” is simply the nature either we don’t see or don’t comprehend. It is the site of myth, religion, metaphysics—and perhaps of science as well. The strangest or “weirdest” understanding of nature is given to us not from ancient superstitions but from modern science. Perhaps the natural is supernatural, and vice-versa.

https://lithub.com/how-algernon-blackwood-turned-nature-into-sublime-horror/

If you would like to see my take on nature via the landscape, read Tangier Gardens.

Tangier Gardens ebook is FREE TODAY. Get it!!!

And if you know of contemporary authors in the same vein, please include them in your comment.

And lastly genre: after you have read Tangier Gardens, tell me what genre you think it fits.

Almonds and wild flowers

The landscape of Tangier Gardens

This almond orchard grows in Morocco. Soils are rich and because of hydroelectric dams, water for agriculture is plentiful north of the Middle Atlas.

This landscape attracted CJ; but the landscape gave root to elements that undid CJ.

Read about how he reacted to these landscape challenges in Tangier Gardens

Tangier Gardens ebook is FREE TODAY.

Get it now!!!

Les Arômes du Maroc

Mimosa and narcissus.

Balancing, cleansing, energising, relaxing, uplifting…we can all do with some of that.

Acacia dealbata–it grows like a native in the northern third of Morocco; and, in spring, you can always find its cut flowers, fresh from the bled (countryside), being sold by Rif ladies in Tangier.

But CJ had another take on mimosa when he got this close to it.

CJ reckoned when you get this close to a flower, it is because the flower has invited you. That invitation is the key that unlocks a portal–a paranormal portal.

Don’t believe me? Read his story, his take on plants in Tangier Gardens.

Tangier Gardens ebook is FREE TODAY.

Get it!!!

Find out about the magic of plants and their flowers at the Hibiscus House.

Moroccan medina water fountains

I’m flogging my book.

The book? Tangier Gardens.

TANGIER GARDENS

This is a typical Moroccan medina water fountain that, in Tangier Gardens, CJ was planning to study. Why?

Because these beautifully tiled fountains were local community nodes for daily gathering of water to use at home. Everyone felt and knew the importance of water supplied by these beautiful fountains.

In Tangier Gardens CJ documents his attempt to study these community landmarks–and the strange challenges he faced.
Today, Tangier Gardens ebook is FREE!

Get it now!!

Tangier riad?

This is a Tangier medina riad.

Get Tangier Gardens.
It’s FREE TODAY on Amazon.

A small courtyard garden, as we in the USA would say. A garden surrounded by the house–your home.

In CJ’s view, it is an excellent, safe and intimate space to get close to plants.

Traditionally it is a practical place for edible plants, medicinal plants, fragrant plants, beautiful plants–and it doesn’t require much water. What’s wrong with that?

Want to learn more about CJ’s discoveries in Tangier riads?

Get Tangier Gardens.

It’s FREE TODAY on Amazon.

Did I say the ebook Tangier Gardens is FREE TODAY?

Go for it!

Tangier Gardens-IT’S FREE TODAY

Get it, share it, review it!

Weaving culture with horticulture…

That is the beginning of the arcane magic that instructors introduce to students of landscape architecture.

But what happens when those students emerge into our contemporary real life dystopic world?

That is indeed what I wrote about in Tangier Gardens

My ebook, Tangier Gardens, is FREE on Amazon TODAY.

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