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Authors: Ann Ripley

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Death of a Political Plant

BOOK: Death of a Political Plant
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Praise for the gardening mysteries of Ann Ripley

DEATH OF A GARDEN PEST

“A HYBRID OF A TRADITIONAL WHODUNIT AND AN UP-TO-THE-MINUTE GARDENING GUIDE.”


The Denver Post

“GARDENING AND MURDER MAKE A FASCINATING COMBINATION IN DEATH OF A GARDEN PEST. GARDENER-SLEUTH LOUISE ELDRIDGE OFFERS AN ENCHANTING VIEW OF GARDENS WHILE FACING DOWN DAUNTINGLY EVIL OPPONENTS.”

—Carolyn G. Hart

“ANOTHER MYSTERY FEATURING THAT DELIGHTFUL GARDENER LOUISE ELDRIDGE AND HER RESOURCEFUL BAND OF FAMILY SLEUTHS. DEATH OF A GARDEN PEST IS AS TANGLED AND FULL OF SURPRISES AS THE BEST NATIVIST GARDEN.”

—Margaret Coel

MULCH

“ANN RIPLEY PLANTS CLUES IN UNEXPECTED PLACES, DEVELOPS A PLOT WITH INTERESTING DIRT, AND SEEDS HER STORY WITH COLORFUL CHARACTERS, INCLUDING A CAPTIVATING, NOXIOUS VILLAIN. MULCH IS NOT YOUR GARDEN-VARIETY MYSTERY.”


New York Times
bestselling author Diane Mott Davidson


MULCH
IS ONE OF THOSE LITTLE GEMS.”


Mystery Lovers Bookshop News

“LOUISE IS A SMART, APPEALING HEROINE.”


Kirkus Reviews

Other Gardening Mysteries by Ann Ripley

MULCH

DEATH OF A GARDEN PEST

TO VIRGINIA

Contents

Cover

Other Books By This Author

Title Page

Dedication

Acknowledgments

Gardening Essays by Ann Ripley

Chapter 1 - One

Chapter 2 - Two

Chapter 3 - Three

Houseguests Are Like Gardens—Both Should Be Low-Maintenance

Chapter 4 - Four

Chapter 5 - Five

Chapter 6 - Six

Getting Bogged Down and Loving It: The Wonders of the Bog Garden

Chapter 7 - Seven

Chapter 8 - Eight

Chapter 9 - Nine

Chapter 10 - Ten

The Fishy Thing About a Water Garden

Chapter 11 - Eleven

Chapter 12 - Twelve

Chapter 13 - Thirteen

How to Put Serenity into a Small Garden

Chapter 14 - Fourteen

Chapter 15 - Fifteen

Chapter 16 - Sixteen

Following One’s Native Instincts: Natural Gardening Goes Mainstream

Chapter 17 - Seventeen

Chapter 18 - Eighteen

Chapter 19 - Nineteen

Covering Up: All About Ground Covers

Chapter 20 - Twenty

Chapter 21 - Twenty-One

Politically Incorrect Plants, Conceits and Follies

Chapter 22 - Twenty-Two

Chapter 23 - Twenty-Three

Chapter 24 - Twenty-Four

The Enchanting Innocence of the Annual

Chapter 25 - Twenty-Five

Chapter 26 - Twenty-Six

Chapter 27 - Twenty-Seven

Doing It Your Way: Hubris in the Name of Gardening Is No Vice

Chapter 28 - Twenty-Eight

Chapter 29 - Twenty-Nine

There Is No End of Uses for Garden Tools

Chapter 30 - Thirty

About the Author

Copyright

Acknowledgments

T
HANKS TO THE MANY PEOPLE WHO ENCOURAGED
me and helped me in the writing of this book, notably, Kate Miciak, my editor, for her spirited ideas; and Jane Jordan Browne, my agent, for her counsel. Special expertise came from koi experts Jim Brunk, Joyce Conrad, and Bob Kennedy; Steve Still of the Perennial Plant Association; the National Gallery of Art; The Denver Botanic Gardens; the Fairfax County, Virginia, Medical Examiner; and Emeritus Professor Roger Knutson, who writes about roadkill, skunk cabbage, and other flora and fauna. My gratitude goes to those who patiently read, listened, and offered advice: Margaret Coel, Sybil Downing, Karen Gilleland, Connie and Tom Lynch, Beverly Carrigan, Ken and Phyllis Baker, Jim Mahoney, Bill Barnds, Keith Jackson, Irene Sinclair, Jessie Lew Mahoney, James K. Anderson, Mary Lou Butcher, and my husband, Tony. I also am indebted to the houseguests over the years who provided me with so much useful material.

BOOK: Death of a Political Plant
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