Past honorees have been pioneers in print, radio and television. Their names have graced campus buildings and public gardens. For a dairy farmer's grandson from Maine, the news that he was to receive the Ameri-can Horticultural Society's 2006 Horticultural Communication Award was the most humbling of his career.
“To be included among the past recipients of AHS awards is the highest honor of my professional life, and nothing I could ever have dreamed of receiving,” said Paul Tukey, who founded People, Places & Plants magazine in 1995, along with a television show of the same name in 2002. “It is something I share with an incredibly dedicated staff at People, Places & Plants and my friends and family, who have supported me through all the trials and tribulations of an running an independently-owned publishing company in this day and age. Honestly, to win this was stunning.”
Founded in 1922, the American Horticultural Society is one of the oldest gardening organizations in the nation. Its awards program, started in 1952, is considered to be the most prestigious in the field of horticulture.
“The American Horticultural Society recognizes American horticultural heroes in a wide variety of professions through the annual Great American Gardeners Awards,” said AHS President Katy Moss Warner. “These awards celebrate the best and brightest in our nation, from scientists who develop tough plants for our gardens, to public garden professionals who promote earth-friendly gardening practices, to journalists who popularize gardening throughout America. This year, Paul Tukey is receiving the AHS Horticultural Communication Award in recognition of the extraordinary work he has done to encourage gardening through his dynamic talks, his presence on HGTV, and his People, Places & Plants magazine.”
Tukey, who hosts a popular gardening show based on the magazine on HGTV at 7 a.m. each Sunday, is one of 12 members of the horticultural community who will be honored by the American Horticultural Society during its Great American Gardeners Awards ceremony and banquet on June 2. He is just the third Maine recipient of a lifetime achievement award since AHS began presenting the awards. University of Maine horticulturist Lewis Lipp (1972) and Currier McEwen (1995) were the others.
“At times like this there are many people I really hope are smiling down on us, and Currier is one of them,” said Tukey, who wrote numerous articles about the renowned iris hybridizer from South Harpswell, Maine, who passed away two years ago at age 101. “Another would be my grandfather, Henry VanDyne, who — I'm proud to remember — once won the award for dairyman of the year for New England at the Springfield Exposition. Spending my summers with him on his farm was what made me love the scents and physical activity of gardening.”
After graduating from the University of Maine and embarking on an award-winning, nine-year career as a sportswriter and newspaper editor, Tukey followed his love of the outdoors into landscaping and founded his own company, Home 'n' Land, in the late 1980s. In honoring Tukey for his garden writing and his television work that began at NBC affiliate WCSH6 in Portland, Maine in 1996, the AHS cited his repeated commitment to supporting independent garden centers as well as promoting environmentally friendly gardening — including an upcoming book on organic lawns.
“Now more than ever I think it's important to retain an independent voice and be an advocate for the environment and family business,” Tukey said. “This award, in great measure, is a validation of the efforts we've made. We really try to make a difference in people's lives.”
Tukey also reiterated his thanks to many people who have made a difference in his own life and professional career.
“This really should be an award for everyone involved with People, Places & Plants because, even though I had the idea, the company belongs to our staff and everyone in horticulture in the Northeast,” he said. “I could fill an entire magazine thanking everyone who has helped, including Susan Gilman and Rick Churchill, who have been here since the beginning, and especially Mark Sellew, who was at our side for five extraordinary and evolutionary years. And, of course, ‘The Man in the Red Suspenders' and his amazing wife — Roger and Elisabeth Swain. If I should get an award for anything, it would be my ability to surround myself with great people.” — Allen Lessels
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The Giller Award is the biggest literary prize in Canada, given each year to the author whose work of fiction is deemed the most deserving by a panel of judges, which includes critics, journalists, and publishers. The award is generally believed to contribute not only to the prestige of the author who receives it, but also to the sales success of the book in question as well, although this is not always the case.
As of 2001, St. Catharine's, Ontario, could boast its own resident Giller prize winner when Richard B. Wright walked off with the award for his hugely successful novel, Clara Callan. The novel is set in Canada during the years of the Great Depression, the main character a spinster schoolteacher and her vivacious and somewhat impractical sister Nora. Clara secretly longs for the openness that Nora embraces, and the novel is written in the form of the sister's letters and diaries.
Clara has sold over 200,000 copies in Canada, and the fact that the novel took home the Giller convinced publishers to release all of Wright's previous novels again as well (he had written eight previous to Clara).
Wright himself is a lifetime Ontario resident, born in Midland in 1937. He attended university at the Ryerson Institute of Technology in the 1950s, and briefly flirted with various media positions while writing, and eventually took on a job at MacMillan Canada, where he moved from editing to sales. His first commercially available book was written in the 1960s, and was a children's mystery novel.
Wright penned his first adult oriented novel during a brief sojourn out of province, when he and his wife moved to the Gaspe Peninsula. The Weekend Man had limited commercial success after its release, but today it is recognized as a minor Canadian classic.
Today Wright makes his home in the city of St. Catharines, and will often take interviews at local hot spots, intimately familiar with the pulse of the town. Since the release of Clara Callan Wright has enjoyed success with subsequent novels Adultery and Final Things. All of Wright's novels point signify his talent as a deeply motivated and diverse writer, as even after the success of Clara he refuses to succumb to the temptation to follow a formula with his writing, turning out efforts which are as diverse in character and story line as one author could make them.
Both Allen Lessels & Rob Parker are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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