
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


👉 Pitch in on Patreon and fuel the future of free-thinking conversations. https://www.patreon.com/parallaxviews
Also visit our returning sponsor Mike Swanson's Wall Street Window for the best financial and trading newsletter around:
On this edition of Parallax Views, we continue our annual Halloween “spooky season” episodes with Marta McDowell, author of Gardening Can Be Murder: How Poisonous Poppies, Sinister Shovels, and Grim Gardens Have Inspired Mystery Writers. McDowell, known for her books connecting literature and horticulture, turns her attention to crime fiction and shows how gardens, plants, and gardeners themselves have played a surprisingly sinister role in the mystery tradition. From poisonous blooms slipped into a cup of tea to trowels and hedges concealing dark secrets, McDowell explores how the world of horticulture has provided inspiration, atmosphere, and even murder weapons for generations of writers. In this conversation, we discuss why gardens make such fertile ground for crime stories, how botany intersects with the genre’s history, and what these recurring motifs reveal about cultural attitudes towards nature, danger, and death.
Music by Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio - Track: "Exorcism"
By J.G.4.5
135135 ratings
👉 Pitch in on Patreon and fuel the future of free-thinking conversations. https://www.patreon.com/parallaxviews
Also visit our returning sponsor Mike Swanson's Wall Street Window for the best financial and trading newsletter around:
On this edition of Parallax Views, we continue our annual Halloween “spooky season” episodes with Marta McDowell, author of Gardening Can Be Murder: How Poisonous Poppies, Sinister Shovels, and Grim Gardens Have Inspired Mystery Writers. McDowell, known for her books connecting literature and horticulture, turns her attention to crime fiction and shows how gardens, plants, and gardeners themselves have played a surprisingly sinister role in the mystery tradition. From poisonous blooms slipped into a cup of tea to trowels and hedges concealing dark secrets, McDowell explores how the world of horticulture has provided inspiration, atmosphere, and even murder weapons for generations of writers. In this conversation, we discuss why gardens make such fertile ground for crime stories, how botany intersects with the genre’s history, and what these recurring motifs reveal about cultural attitudes towards nature, danger, and death.
Music by Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio - Track: "Exorcism"

1,458 Listeners

1,514 Listeners

1,583 Listeners

8,850 Listeners

1,929 Listeners

216 Listeners

3,912 Listeners

936 Listeners

3,326 Listeners

198 Listeners

206 Listeners

298 Listeners

2,704 Listeners

1,047 Listeners

95 Listeners