The $64 Tomato

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The $64 Tomato
The $64 Tomato cover.jpg
AuthorWilliam Alexander
SubjectGardening
GenreNonfiction
Publisher Algonquin Books
Publication date
2006
ISBN 9781565125032
Website http://williamalexander.com/books.cfm

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 is a nonfiction book by William Alexander, published in 2006. The $64 Tomato was a nominee for Quill Award in the debut author of the year category [1] and was selected for the 2006 National Book Festival. [2]

Contents

Summary

The $64 Tomato is a memoir of Alexander's gardening project. When he and his family purchased a home with several acres in a small town in New York, he was determined to use some of the property to create a 2,000 sq ft (190 m2) organic garden. Alexander documents his adventures battling pests, weeds, plant diseases, deer, and a persistent groundhog he names Superchuck. After several years of gardening, he calculates that each Brandywine tomato he grew and harvested cost him $64.

Author

William Alexander is the director of technology at the Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research in Orangeburg, New York. [3] He graduated from the University at Albany with a degree in English literature. [4] He is married to Anne Mullin, an internist, [3] and they have two children. [4]

In addition to The $64 Tomato, Alexander has written op-eds for The New York Times . [4]

Reception

Kirkus Reviews describes it as "An amusing compilation of do's and don'ts for aspiring gardeners afflicted with hubris." [5] Publishers Weekly says "this hilarious horticultural memoir ... manages to impart an existential lesson on the interconnectedness of nature and the fine line between nurturing and killing." [6]

Constance Casey, writing in The New York Times Book Review , says Alexander's writing is "engaging, well paced and informative". [7] In The New York Times Magazine , Holly Brubach recommends The $64 Tomato to prevent "Obsessive Gardening Syndrome" and says Alexander's "timing and his delivery are flawless". [8] Anthony Doerr, in The Boston Globe , calls the book a "quick and very entertaining summer read". [9]

Additional reviews

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References

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