June in the Garden
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Narrated by:
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Kirsty Strain
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By:
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Eleanor Wilde
About this listen
June views the world in colour and bloom. She is a keen horticulturist and an amateur arborist, and she can name every flower species beginning with the letter J. She knows a lot about garden management and soil cultivation. But what she doesn’t know a lot about, is people.
When her mother dies unexpectedly and their home is repossessed, June decides to journey south to find her secondary caregiver who she has not seen since she was an infant. However, June’s biological father does not want to be found, nor does he want to be reminded of those turbulent times up north with her mother. Panicked and confused, he turns her away, not wanting to jeopardise his London life and his new family, who he lives with in a big redstone townhouse in Notting Hill in a garden filled with white roses and lemon thyme, on a street lined with Japanese Dawn Redwood trees.
With nowhere else to go and without her father knowing, June moves into the yellow shed in his garden where she can spend her days once again surrounded by colour and bloom. There, she reluctantly forges a new friendship with her ten-year-old half-brother and the family dog, who keep her residence in the garden shed a secret, and over the course of a balmy summer in London, she realises that this child is the only one who’s ever really understood her.
As the summer blooms wither and autumn sets in, June is forced to both process the differences that stop her from maintaining social relationships with others and the death of her mother if she ever stands a chance of connecting with her father, and with herself.
22 years old, June is a neurodivergent Scottish woman whose life is upended by the death of her alcoholic mother. With her highly structured world thrown into chaos, June finds herself homeless and seeking the father she's never known, after discovering a letter among her mother's belongings. June travels to London in search of her father, only to be turned away at his doorstep, in a desperate attempt to keep her hidden.
Similar to the last book I read (Not Quite Dead Yet), June in the Garden is the debut adult novel from an established YA author, recommended to me because, like some of my favourite books, it features a quirky lead character and a quiet, character-driven story. June's neurodivergence often leads her to make choices that seem completely outrageous, like assuming that living in someone's garden shed and sneaking into their house to cook and shower while they are out are perfectly reasonable life choices.
Told from June's POV, it offers insight into her neurodivergent mind, her love of flowers and gardens, and when she realises that her half-brother is the only one who's ever really understood her, her search for connection. June in the Garden is an exploration of loss, identity, and connection. If you liked Lenny Marks Gets Away with Murder by Kerryn Mayne or Strange Sally Diamond by Liz Nugent. You might also like June in the Garden by Eleanor Wilde.
Big thumbs up. #thumbsup👍 with an extra thumbs up for the cover art, which is absolutely perfect, and has multiple links back to the story.
#designnerd #booksdeevaareads #2025bookshelf #JuneintheGarden
@eleanorwilde_author @wfhowes #wfhowes
The perfect holiday read
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