University of Washington
Leaflet for Scholars from the Elisabeth C. Miller Library

Volume 12, Issue 8 | August 2025

Lila Thomas: Nested

Detail from Conversations with Hae by Lila Thomas, 2024
We welcome Lila Thomas this month. Her Nested exhibit runs August 4-28 during  library open hours. 

Lila’s work explores themes of identity, family history, and cultural exchange through food, music, and mutual understanding of generational trauma. While living in Seattle she has found a sense of community with folks throughout different diasporas. Connecting over topics like food, shared culture, and music has been healing to her sense of being. She feels grounded being around people who share a sense of understanding and wants to share an honest representation of their identity by creating an intimate and immersive setting for the viewer.

She creates this intimate and immersive experience by using light and color to depict familiar spaces of her life with visual beauty. She achieves this by emphasizing the steady movement of light in the composition. She enjoys giving hints about the subject’s interests and identity by including objects of importance to the individual.

Lila is driven to create these honest and beautiful depictions due to the lack of representation of Black and queer folks in comfort and ease in the canon of Western art.
Get tickets: Miller Memorial Lecture with Fergus Garrett Wednesday, September 10 at Meany Hall
 
Fergus Garrett
 

Fergus Garrett

 
Chief Executive and Head Gardener at Great Dixter House & Gardens, Northiam, East Sussex, England
 
The Education of a Gardener:  Curiosity, Creativity, and Inspiration 
 
 
The lecture will be held in Meany Hall for the Performing Arts at the University of Washington.
  • Doors open at 6:30 pm with the Lecture beginning at 7:00 pm.
  • A free reception with refreshments will be held at the conclusion of the program.
Tickets are free and will be required for entry. To request tickets, email  info@millergarden.org beginning August 4th.

Searching for Sunshine by Ishita Jain

Reviewed by Brian Thompson
Ishita Jain's colorful sketch of Washington Square Park
Ishita Jain grew up in New Delhi, India, and moved to New York City in 2018. While used to being in a big city, she found the change in climate quite a shock, especially during the cold, dark winter months. To cope, she spent as much time as she could outside exploring her new city.
 
Her book Searching for Sunshine reflects what she found in parks, gardens, and other places where plants are abundant. But she was more than just a casual observer. A skilled artist, she made drawings of plants – from single flowers to whole trees – along with other sights of city life.
 
Another way she engaged was with the people active in green places. She would ask them “about their experience of working with the natural world, the impact of nature on their everyday lives, and why plants make us happy.“
 
The resulting book is a delightful blend of text and graphical depictions of her interviews, which cover a wide spectrum of personalities and livelihoods. These include Tama Matsuoka Wong, who is a forager and the author of Into the Weeds, another book in the Miller Library collection.
 
Jain also explored a favorite park with Jose Lopez, Deputy Director of Parklands for New York City. She met with Dr. Barbara Ambrose and her colleagues in laboratory research to learn about their work at the New York Botanical Garden. Other interviewees included a florist, an entomologist, and the horticulture staff for a large (almost 500 acres with 7,000 trees) cemetery in Brooklyn.
 
Rebecca Alexander, recently retired after 20 years on the Miller Library staff, considers this one of the library’s books that made a lasting impression upon her. She describes  Searching for Sunshine as an “embodiment of why plants matter to people, exuberantly illustrated.”

Ask a Librarian

The Miller Library's Plant Answer Line provides quick answers to gardening questions.
You can reach the reference staff at 206-UWPLANT (206-897-5268),
hortlib@uw.edu, or from our website, www.millerlibrary.org.

Digital resources

book reviews
Online thesis collection
Traité des arbres et arbustes qui se cultivent en France en pleine terre / par m. Duhamel du Monceau, Inspecteur général de la Marine, de l'Académie Royale des Sciences circa 1755
Journals available online

New to the library

Field guide to the wild flowers of the Canary Islands / Chris Thorogood, Mark Carine, J. Alfredo Reyes-Betancort
This infant adventure : offspring of the Royal Gardens at Kew / Christian Lamb.
How to photograph gardens : beautiful images made simple / Jason Ingram.
The water-smart garden : techniques and strategies for conserving, capturing, and efficiently using water in today's climate... and tomorrow's / Noelle Johnson.
Cannabis : a global history / Bradley J. Borougerdi.
The garden at the end of time : getting by in the age of climate change / John Hanson Mitchell.
The future of gardens / Mark Lane.
A wilder way : how gardens grow us / Poppy Okotcha ; illustrated by Frances Whitfield.
Canadian wildflowers / by Catharine Parr Traill ; painted and lithographed by Agnes Fitzgibbon.
1000 fuchsias: a colour guide. / Miep Nijhuis.
The book of garden flowers / Christopher Stocks, Angie Lewin.
Countryside history : the life and legacy of Oliver Rackham / edited by Ian D. Rotherham and Jennifer A. Moody.
Roses in the garden : stories of treasured collections / by Ngoc Minh Ngo.
Ferns : lessons in survival from Earth's most adaptable plants / Fay-Wei Li and Jacob S. Suissa ; illustrated by Laura Silburn.
Life with flowers : inspiration and lessons from the garden / Frances Palmer.
Flower day : a story of 24 hours and 24 floral lives / written by Sandra Knapp ; illustrated by Katie Scott.
Mysterious patterns : finding fractals in nature / Sarah C. Campbell ; photographs by Sarah C. Campbell and Richard P. Campbell.
The manga guide to organic vegetable gardening : detailed tips for growing 50 types of vegetables, fruits and herbs / Hideki Yoda.
Some bugs / words by Angela DiTerlizzi ; bugs by Brendan Wenzel.
	 Every peach is a story / by David Mas Masumoto and Nikiko Masumoto ; illustrated by Lauren Tamaki.
Backyard bugs / Jill McDonald.
Can you hear the plants speak? / Nicholas Hummingbird with Julia Wasson ; illustrations by Madelyn Goodnight
Good night yoga : a pose-by-pose bedtime story / written by Mariam Gates ; illustrated by Sarah Jane Hinder.
Colors / Chihiro Takeuchi.
Mara plants a seed / Robert Furrow and Donna Jo Napoli ; illustrated by Melissa Bailey.
Pollinators & native plants for kids : an introduction to botany / by Jaret C. Daniels
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