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A Botanical Biography

Art Wolk was born and raised in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania by parents whose idea of gardening
was watching their neighbors tend vegetable and flower gardens.
In fact, every ancestor he’s tracked down was a non-gardener,
meaning Art is a mutant, an alien, or both.
Naturally, his wife, Arlene, and
daughter, Beth, are both non-gardeners. So, Art's been subjected to the warped views of non-gardeners
all his life. The
advantage is that he was able to give a relatively unbiased
account of the unending confrontations between gardeners and
non-gardeners. The disadvantage is that he grew up thinking
gardening was something you did when no one was watching or
under cover of darkness. This behavior was reinforced at the
no-gardens-permitted apartment complex where he and Arlene lived
when they were first married.
Eventually, Art reached the
point where he didn’t give a damn about apartment rules or what
non-gardeners thought about his garden or gardening activities,
which, of course, were his first symptoms of hortiholism. His
devious and deviant behavior has continued unabated, and he now
admits to stealing cuttings in the past, nabbing his neighbors
bagged leaves (for mulch), and pirating roadside ferns. On the
other hand, his felonious activities haven’t stopped him from
spending thousands of dollars on plants. At this point, he’s a
prime candidate for a Hortiholics Anonymous retreat.
Art was a biology major at
Temple University, where he took enough courses to learn how
plants “think,” but not enough courses to realize he was the
worst possible person to become a gardener: during his senior
year, he was stung by a bee, went into anaphylactic shock, and
barely survived. Of course, this made absolutely no difference
in his choice of hobby, making him forevermore a death-defying
flower gardener.
Life progressed fairly normally
in the 1970’s, until an irreversible, life-altering event
occurred: Art decided to enter a plant in the famed
Philadelphia Flower Show
in 1978 and, on his first try, won a blue ribbon. This single
incident turned a fairly normal man into a blue-ribbon-hording
flower show maniac. Basically, from that point forward, he
procured plants using three criteria: 1) Could they win a blue
ribbon? 2) Could they win a blue ribbon? and 3) Could they win a
blue ribbon?
Although he's non-prejudicial
about which plants fit these three criteria, his favorites for
exhibition are bulbs. Art's lectures and publications about them
often include odd statements, such as, "...they feel neglected,"
"...they frolic in these conditions," or "...they're quite
simply unhappy." When he first made these comments to his wife,
she stared at him in disbelief and began calling him a "Bulb
Whisperer."
By 1993, Art owned a greenhouse,
or, more accurately, the greenhouse owned him. By the time he tried to win
the Philadelphia Flower Show Grand Sweepstakes Award in 1995, he
had plants hanging at the top of the greenhouse, plants crammed
onto every shelf, specimens fighting for space on every growing
bench, and plants crowding the floors and walkways. Amazingly,
Art didn’t fall and break his neck, probably because he was more
afraid he’d hurt his plants than his spine.
He managed to win the 1995 Grand
Sweepstakes by driving himself and his wife and daughter to the
Dark Side of Family Relationships. Suffice it to say that
absolutely nothing out of the ordinary occurred during this
quest, if
you don’t count 1) breaking and entering a flower shop, 2)
getting into an accident at the flower show’s unloading dock and
not reporting it for a month, 3) forgetting all his plant entry
forms, 4) trying to get to the flower show using a car
completely encased in ice, and 5) entering 140 plants into the
competition.
So, how did a book like
Garden Lunacy: A Growing Concern
come about? The simple answer is by luck and accident …
actually, lots of accidents. He was lucky that he saw the humor
inherent in gardening and gardeners. And, he was also lucky that he was asked
to be president of the South Jersey Horticultural Society. When
the newsletter editor asked him to write a president’s column,
he decided to let loose his irreverent views on the skewed
perceptions of avid gardeners like himself. And the accidents?
Let’s just say that when it comes to gardening, and especially
competing in flower shows, Art is more than a bit prone to
disasters. The advantage is that this gives him lots of stories
to tell. The disadvantage is that he might not live long enough
after his next disaster to write about it.
Garden Lunacy
wasn’t Art’s first foray into published writing: he had twenty magazine
articles published before his book was completed. What’s
incredible is that his writing career didn’t stop after his
first article, since he and his first editor weren’t bosom
friends … at least not at first. She was the type of editor who
didn’t suffer fools gladly, and he was the type of writer who
foolishly asked unending questions. When he visited her office
for the first time, he was completely intimidated. This became
complete trepidation when he saw a sign over her desk that read,
“Editors are the ones who come out after the battle to kill
the wounded!”
Luckily, he wasn’t wounded at
the time.
Although no literary achievement
matched the excitement of seeing his first publication in print,
it took a year before Art wrote another article for the same
editor. This time, he was very fortunate. The editor’s boss
loved Art’s article, which made the editor very happy and also
made an amazing thing happen: Art and the editor became good
friends. He now admits that without her guidance he may never
have found his literary muse.
By 1998, Art’s writing was
becoming more and more about gardeners and less about plants.
That year, he wrote a magazine article about a children’s garden
he had started seven years earlier. It was a story he wrote more
from his heart than his brain, and, incredibly, it won a writing
award from the Garden Writers Association.
His reaction to reading the
letter informing him that he had won wasn’t exactly subdued and
dignified: he ran around the house as if he had suddenly been
attacked by 10,000 fleas. Art and Arlene read the letter over
and over, to be certain the words wouldn’t fly off the page.
After five minutes, Arlene was in tears, and Art couldn’t stop
thinking about his high school English teachers, spinning in
their graves, who had told him he had the writing capability of
a protozoan.

By 2000, Art had written over
fifty newsletter articles that ultimately became the backbone of
Garden Lunacy: A Growing Concern. He wrote for another
two years, whenever he had the chance; this included
middle-of-the-night visits to his computer, jotting down ideas
while driving at 60 m.p.h., and frenetic scribbling while eating
lunch (which many times found its way onto his lap and notepad).
When his first draft was
completed, Garden Lunacy was about a million miles from
being published, because Art subsequently edited it no
less than thirty
times. The only material that made the final cut were stories
that still made him laugh out loud after the last edit. (And,
that says a lot, because editing anything more than three
times would make most writers retch.)
Art neither wrote Garden
Lunacy to become a millionaire (although it wouldn’t make
him depressed), nor to win prizes (although they’re not
unpleasant to receive), but rather to make his readers laugh.
So, if you chuckle out loud and occasionally get odd stares from
people around you, you won’t be alone.
Art will be laughing along with
you.
****************
To purchase Garden
Lunacy click
HERE.

Questions or comments? Contact
ArtWolk@gardenlunacy.com
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