"Barnard's Nature's Colony gives detail to the shifting function of the Garden, and the competing values projected onto it."-- "Times Literary Supplement"
"Barnard has researched a masterpiece on the Singapore Botanic Gardens' history, greatly enriching our knowledge and reinforcing its inscription as a World Heritage Site of global significance. We get the fascinating back story to the trials and tribulations suffered by the superintendents and directors as the administrative environment changed during more than 150 years of the Gardens' progress. . . . Barnard has given us a new and very different view of the history of gardens in Singapore and how we should interpret them as part of cultural history in an ever-changing world."--Nigel P. Taylor, Singapore Botanic Gardens
"Nature's Colony is a fascinating exploration of Singapore's long-established botanical garden. For visitors since colonial times, the Garden has been a tranquil window into Southeast Asia's biodiversity. The book conjures up both the changing romantic visions and the scientific imperatives that inspired the Garden's curators. The book also takes us behind the fringe of leaves into scientific politics and the politics of Singapore society during its many transformations. Genially written and rich in anecdote, this book will enchant both historians and general readers."--Robert Cribb, Australian National University
Barnard's recounting of the complex history of the Singapore Botanic Gardens and its shifting priorities and agendas over time provide a window onto the transformation of a colonial port into a 21st-century botanical garden and research institution and Singapore's first World Heritage Site.-- "Huntia"