Review of 'My Vegetable Love: A Journal of a Growing Season'
- By Emily d'Aulaire
- Smithsonian magazine, May 1997, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The language of Klaus' garden spills into the language of his life. His students' theses "come to fruition." When the English department hires new, young professors, Klaus feels "like a late summer tomato in an early spring garden." When one fine day he declares, "And I myself felt as good as the soil," the reader knows that for Carl Klaus it doesn't get any better than this.
Though straightforward, Klaus' lean style can pack an emotional wallop. No one who has put a beloved pet to sleep can read with a dry eye his description of burying his 20-year-old cat. "There's a hump there now," he writes after tamping down the earth beneath the apple tree where he buried her, ". . . but Kate says that in time the hump will sink and the grass grow back until we hardly know it's there at all."
Near the end of the growing season Klaus notes, "It's only a vegetable garden, after all," but anyone who reads his book understands that it is far more than that. Just as anyone who reads his book will long for one of the meals so vividly described throughout -- like the one planned around the last stir-fried snow peas of the season: "Charcoal-grilled mahi-mahi marinated in canola oil, lime juice, garlic, and our own lemon grass; steamed basmati and jasmine rich with chopped garlic chives from the herb bed; a special side dish of fermented black beans mixed with chopped ginger, hot pepper flakes, and oil that we prepared this morning; a bowl of fresh cherry tomatoes from the garden, standing by to cool our palates, just in case; and a salad of sliced cucumbers, marinated in a vinaigrette of sesame oil, rice wine vinegar, sugar, tamari, and Tabasco." As Klaus put it, "So much fuss was ne'er lavished over a bunch of pea pods."
Bon appetit -- and good reading.
Reviewer Emily d'Aulaire writes from her home in Connecticut.
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