A garden is a house, and a house, a garden. The text is an invitation to see a house from the point of view of the garden, which, on the other hand, has been so close to it from its very beginnings. Perhaps the interest in bringing the house closer to the garden can be best explained in the words of Ian Hamilton Finlay, the author of the Little Sparta Garden: “A garden is not an object, but a process.” The book explores different realities, focuses on some events either close to or seemingly foreign to the house, and highlights other events that we could consider as "behaviors," such as the search for fantasy, thus weaving an approach to the house that invites us to understand it as something we need to complete, sensitive to the contingency that makes it grow. A house that is closer to incorporating than to cleaning, to planting than to drawing.