Flower Confidential: The Good, the Bad, and the Beautiful in the Business of Flowers
Book Details
Author(s)Amy Stewart
PublisherAlgonquin Books
ISBN / ASINB001F7APDY
ISBN-13978B001F7APD4
AvailabilityUsually ships in 1-2 business days
Sales Rank421,642
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
We buy more flowers a year than we do Big Macs, spending $6.2 billion annually. We use them to mark our most important events, to express sentiments that might otherwise go unsaid. And we demand perfection. So it s no surprise that there is a $40 billion global industry devoted to making flowers flawless.
Amy Stewart takes us inside the flower trade from the hybridizers, who create new varieties in the laboratory, to the growers, who produce flowers by the millions (often in a factory-like setting), to the Dutch auctioneers, who set the bar (and the price), and ultimately to the neighborhood florists orchestrating the mind-boggling demands of Valentine s and Mother s Day. There s the breeder intent on developing the first blue rose; an eccentric horticultural legend who created the world s most popular lily; a grower of gerberas of every color imaginable; and the equivalent of a Tiffany diamond: the Forever Young rose.
Stewart explores the relevance of flowers in our lives and in our history, and in the process she reveals all that has been gained and lost by tinkering with nature.
Amy Stewart takes us inside the flower trade from the hybridizers, who create new varieties in the laboratory, to the growers, who produce flowers by the millions (often in a factory-like setting), to the Dutch auctioneers, who set the bar (and the price), and ultimately to the neighborhood florists orchestrating the mind-boggling demands of Valentine s and Mother s Day. There s the breeder intent on developing the first blue rose; an eccentric horticultural legend who created the world s most popular lily; a grower of gerberas of every color imaginable; and the equivalent of a Tiffany diamond: the Forever Young rose.
Stewart explores the relevance of flowers in our lives and in our history, and in the process she reveals all that has been gained and lost by tinkering with nature.










