A day's harvest in my humble garden of miracles, inspired by the author.

In a season where tropical storms are sending long, slow, drenching rains to my corner of the world, Barbara Kingsolver's
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle seems particularly relevant. In the first chapter, she describes two very different attitudes toward rain: one, a cashier in the city who says it
better not rain on the day she wants to wash her car, and another, a waitress in the country who hopes the rain will last a "good long" time. All of us have cursed the weather at some point, Kingsolver acknowledges, but if you're in touch with the land, you shrug off the inconvenience and bless the water that nourishes the soil where your food grows.
This is not exactly a gardening book, but it is a book almost entirely about gardens. It chronicles a year of transition for the Kingsolver family, who moves from Tucson to southern Appalachia as a result of a crisis of conscience. They were uneasy about the amount of resources and time spent trying to coax life out of the desert soil, and they wanted to see if they could live year-round on their summer property in the more fertile mid-Atlantic region. Between gathering wild morels, hosting a party with a triple-digit guest list, and pawning off bags of zucchini on unsuspecting neighbors, their adventures are hilarious and poignant. A spring of hard work and anticipation is followed by a summer of staggering plenty, a fall of bustling preparation and a winter of cozy comfort and a stocked larder.
Readers can learn from Kingsolver's mistakes and successes through her gorgeous, meaty prose, though she doesn't offer very specific how-to advice in terms of planning and execution; more than anything, however, this is a book that will inspire you to take joy in the daily drudgery of chores like weeding and watering, reconnected with your final goal of eating the healthy, wholesome food you helped raise.
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle was a family effort: there are numerous lengthy sidebars written by Kingsolver's husband, Steven Hopp, a professor of environmental studies. They tend to concentrate on the political and economic ramifications of eating locally-grown food, so I found them an unwelcome interruption to Kingsolver's lush narrative, but after I had read the whole book, I returned to the sidebars and found them very informative. Each chapter ends with a few seasonal recipes, a sample weekly meal plan, and some thoughts by Camille Kingsolver, Barbara's daughter, who writes in a similarly engaging manner to her mother's. And it's Lily, Camille's little sister, whose hands are featured on the front cover; the beginnings of her lucrative chicken-egg business provide a sizable chunk of the story, too.
The book's title has the distinction of being both creative and fitting. The family's adventures with livestock and produce are well-detailed, certainly, but it is Kingsolver's clear belief that life itself is miraculous that makes for an uplifting reading experience. Cold is the heart that fails to leap when, in the final chapter, her efforts to breed turkeys the natural way (99.9% of turkeys are artificially inseminated) are rewarded with the sound of faint, high-pitched peeping from inside of a warm, trembling egg.