
More importantly, the boy understands all the meaning and memories shared by the sculptures. His great-grandson visits often enough that he knows how to help attend to the garden-with watering here and hedge trimming there-and, like his great-grandfather, wanders the garden without distractions like a cell phone or television. The bright, bold green of the hedges juxtaposed against the sketched illustrations of the characters seems a nuance from Smith showing how sometimes memories of the past are clearer than even the present for those in Grandpa Green’s circumstances. While Grandpa Green’s garden is already remarkable, it reaches a deeper level of meaning when Grandpa Green’s suffering from memory loss is disclosed. Lewis’ advice to introduce young readers to tales of brave knights so that they are prepared for the evil they will undoubtedly encounter.

Most beautifully, a young boy wielding a sword to fight off a lake dragon shows Grandpa Green’s desire to inspire his great-grandson to lead a bright, courageous future, and harkens (if only coincidentally) to C.S.


A towering tiered cake marks a wedding day, a paratrooper commemorates military service in World War II, and an enormous carrot memorializes a childhood spent on the farm. As a small boy wanders through a hedge garden, the memories of his great-grandfather’s life unfold in the trimmed bushes around him.
