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GIFTS FROM GEORGIA'S GARDEN by Lisa Robinson Kirkus Star

GIFTS FROM GEORGIA'S GARDEN

How Georgia O'Keeffe Nourished Her Art

by Lisa Robinson ; illustrated by Hadley Hooper

Pub Date: March 19th, 2024
ISBN: 9780823452668
Publisher: Neal Porter/Holiday House

Picture-book biographies about this important American artist abound; this one takes a path less traveled.

The book opens with Georgia O’Keeffe’s famed flower paintings but quickly shifts focus. After fleeing busy New York for “the wide skies” of New Mexico, the artist bought a home in Abiquiú in 1945. In addition to painting, she grew a garden, cooked, and baked. Readers will learn what she planted, how she relied on organic means to keep destructive insects at bay, and how her gardening and painting were deeply intertwined. When showcasing O’Keeffe’s art, Robinson employs quotes (undocumented, but a bibliography is provided). Hooper incorporates her subject’s style and content in key scenes: city skyscrapers against a darkened sky; puffy, isolated clouds foregrounding the garden. While O’Keeffe’s relationship to Alfred Stieglitz is not mentioned, the title does connect her childhood experiences on a Wisconsin farm to her adult pursuits. Shifting perspectives and dynamic design accompany interesting details, beautifully described. In one scene, a pea vine crosses the gutter diagonally, while small, sequential insets in mustard and black show O’Keeffe painting, sewing, and collecting bones as her garden grows. Following the harvest, a bountiful table with home-grown goodness and delectable desserts is paired with a recipe card for pecan butterballs. Who knew?

A veritable feast for the eyes and the mind.

(photograph, biographical note, information on sustainable gardening, pecan butterballs recipe) (Informational picture book. 5-9)