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July/August 2000 Recommended
Garden Books
Because the AHS Horticultural Book
Service was discontinued as of June 30, no further phone or mail
orders will be filled. However, AHS members will still be able to
order books at a discount by linking to Amazon.com through the
Society's Web site. Through this partnership with Amazon.com, AHS
members can receive better discounts on most titles, faster
delivery, greater inventory, and improved access to hard-to-find
books. The books listed here have not been critically evaluated;
they have been chosen for description based on unusual subject
matter or substantive content.
The following books are
our current recommended garden books from the July/August 2000 issue
of
The American
Gardener. To read the review just click on the
book title. You can then order the book directly from Amazon.com by
clicking on "Buy this book!" that follows each review.
Books in the
Spotlight
Roses
Landscaping
Travel
Edible Gardening
Perennials
Summer Reading
Books in the
Spotlight
The Landscaping Revolution. Andy
Wasowski with Sally Wasowski.
Contemporary Books, Lincolnwood, Illinois, 2000. 176 pages. 8" x
101/2". Publisher's price, softcover: $27.95. AHS price: $21.Buy
this book
"Revolution" might seem rather a
strong term for landscaping practices that place wildlife benefits
and resource conservation on at least equal footing with aesthetics
and tradition. And yet the revolution is afoot. It is native plants
and biodiversity versus the tyranny of turf. Vive la Revolution!
Most Americans believe that the lawn
has always been the central element in the landscape. In fact, the
lawn has only been a fixture for commoners since the 1930s, albeit a
well-entrenched fixture worth $27 billion annually in products and
services.
For many eager horticultural
revolutionaries, 1994 was a turning point in the intellectual battle
for the American landscape, with naturalists, water conservation
planners, and others cheering the arrival of Virginia Scott Jenkins'
The Lawn: A History of an American Obsession (Smithsonian
Institution Press), which provided a scholarly and compelling
critique and history of landscaping myopia and environmental abuse.
Now, Andy and Sally Wasowski have produced a conversational-and
sometimes comic-study on the forces of change in American
landscaping. From the author of Requiem for a Lawnmower, we have a
delightful and lighthearted romp beyond the sea of grass and into
the heart of the native plant and xeriscaping movements.
Is it any wonder? With dwindling
groundwater reserves in the American heartland, cyclical droughts,
and mandatory watering restrictions on the one hand, and Code Red
Smog Alerts restricting the use of lawnmowers and backpack
leafblowers on the other, our revered lawns are falling somewhat out
of favor. In addition, we find the biodiversity of spaceship Earth
shrinking with each day as habitat is cleared, developed, and paved
over.
Part of the solution rests in
America's yards and gardens through the use of a full range of
natural landscaping practices. The authors tackle issues such as
exotic invasive plants, homogenized landscapes, and peer pressure in
a tone both jaunty and familiar. They recognize that even important
changes in behavior take time, and that most people have inherited a
bulldozed landscape that cannot be undone overnight.
The Landscaping Revolution provides
graduated steps, or "scenarios," that guide and inspire remedial
efforts to restore natural vitality and balance to the most
white-bread of landscapes. Moreover, the book is filled with case
studies of revolution: truly heartening sidebar profiles of
adventurous gardeners who have successfully lobbied and fought
against the turf-only paradigm in numerous North American
municipalities.
Like most true revolutions, the
conflict for proper land use and self-determination is political as
well as philosophical. Decades-old ordinances and weed laws,
right-of-way maintenance policies, and strict community covenants
are just a sample of the social and political challenges the
revolution must overcome. Happily, the Wasowskis' wry approach is
empowering and entertaining and the tales of successful "landscape
revolutionaries" interwoven throughout the book offer many choices
for very personal landscaping revolutions that can and must be
undertaken by all gardeners of conscience.
-Joseph M. Keyser
Joseph M. Keyser is the education
specialist for the Montgomery County Department of Environmental
Protection in Maryland; he also writes the "Green Man" garden column
for the county's Gazette newspapers.

Hot Plants for Cool Climates:
Gardening with Tropical Plants in
Temperate Zones. Susan A. Roth and Dennis Schrader.
Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston, Massachusetts, 2000. 228 pages. 8" x
10". Publisher's price, hardcover: $35. AHS price: $30.
Buy this book
This book might also be aptly
subtitled: "The Bold and The Beautiful." As American gardeners have
grown more confident, experienced, and freed from the shackles of
formal English borders, they've discovered a world of big leaves and
bright colors that stand up to the heat, humidity, and searing sun
of a North American summer. This book is an excellent introduction,
with equal amounts inspiration and detailed how-to advice.
Even gardeners who espouse a more
"natural" look but who remember the unrelenting heat of the summer
of 1999 might search profitably here for plants that thrive in high
temperatures instead of turning to mush.
Whether you're ready to jump in with
both feet or merely dip a toe, Hot Plants tells you how to bring a
touch of the tropics to temperate climates. The authors visited and
photographed gardens as far north as Vermont, south to South
Carolina, and west to Washington. Some of the gardeners have clearly
embraced the look, while others have used tropical notes to add
vitality, especially in late summer and fall, when gardens dependent
on hardy perennials often look worn out. Although they interviewed
many gardeners, much of the experience related here is firsthand:
Roth is an award-winning writer, photographer, and avid gardener;
Schrader is a designer, nurseryman, and owner of a wholesale
greenhouse.
The book is divided into two
sections. The first provides the inspiration: gorgeous photographs
of entire gardens and smaller vignettes, a bit of history, and
plenty of design advice. A chapter on container planting provides
perhaps the best entrée for gardeners who are not sure how or where
to start. Another chapter looks at hardy plants that provide a
tropical effect with their enormous leaves or exotic profiles.
The chapter on winter survival
techniques is worth the price of the book. Tropicals by definition
don't make it through the winter outdoors in much of North America,
but it turns out that a greenhouse isn't necessary to get dormant
plants through the winter. And you don't need a gardening staff to
manage them-although a good sturdy hand truck is probably an
excellent investment if you plan to move heavy containers into the
basement in the fall and back outdoors in the spring. The advice is
detailed, specific and do-able.
The second section is an encyclopedia
of plants, with descriptions, advice on use, and cultural
instructions for each entry. There's also a detailed list of sources
for tropical plants and tropical-looking hardy plants. The authors
freely admit they have not exhausted the possibilities, but
concentrated on plants they know and have grown, plants that perform
reliably even in less than tropical climates.
-Renée Beaulieu
Renée Beaulieu is a horticulturist
and editor at White Flower Farm in Litchfield, Connecticut. She
invested in a hand truck to move containers to her basement years
ago.

The Once & Future Gardener:
Garden Writing from the Golden Age of Magazines. Edited
by Virginia Tuttle Clayton. David R. Godine, Boston, Massachusetts,
2000. 312 pages. 71/4" x 101/4". Publisher's price, hardcover: $40.
AHS price: $30.
Buy this book
My love affair with old gardening
magazines began when I ran across some very early issues of Sunset
magazine at a garage sale. The pages were yellowed and smelled
faintly of the cedar-lined closet where they'd been stored for
years. The advertisements championed long-extinct seed catalogs. But
the gardening articles were as fresh and interesting as anything I
read today.
Virginia Tuttle Clayton unearthed a
treasure trove of such magazines when she was doing research at the
Library of Congress. As she paged through some of the most popular
magazines from the first four decades of the 20th century, including
House Beautiful, Ladies' Home Journal, and Scribner's Magazine, she
realized that she'd found an uncommonly good collection of garden
writing, one that was worth sharing.
The authors collected in this
anthology-including such well-known names as Louise Beebe Wilder and
Grace Tabor, as well as scores of unknown and anonymous
contributors-quote poetry, debate fiercely over the geranium's
status as a crashing bore or a mainstay of the garden, and insist
that one's annual purchase from the rose catalog can be kept to a
reasonable nine dollars and twenty-five cents. Some articles offer
practical advice on the right kinds of plants for poolside or the
virtues of a moonlight garden. Others muse about the proliferation
of window gardens in New York (citing a florist who wished New
Yorkers would stay in town long enough to let nasturtiums grow in
summer) or make an impassioned plea for more blue in the flower
garden.
It is comforting and also bemusing to
learn that gardeners' concerns have changed very little over the
last 50 to 100 years. Garden writers then, as now, make the case for
letting a little wilderness take over the garden; native plants were
championed, as were wild meadows. A writer in 1921 reflected on her
grandmother's hollyhock-festooned garden with as much nostalgia as
we feel looking back on gardens of the 1920s. And any modern
gardener will sympathize with Barbara Cheney, who wrote in 1936 that
the visitors to her garden were more interested in bragging about
their own horticultural triumphs than admiring hers.
The Once & Future Gardener is the
very best kind of armchair garden reading: It is intimate, funny,
informative, and a fascinating historical read all at once. The book
is divided into seven major sections, including "The Philosophical
Gardener," "A Year in the Garden," and "Flower Garden Design." A
series of color plates shows off some of the most beautifully
illustrated magazine covers of the day, and black-and-white
photographs accompany many of the articles, as they did when the
articles were first published. Clayton provides brief introductions
to each author at the beginning of the article, noting who worked as
a lawyer and gardened on weekends, and who gained notoriety as the
most widely-read garden writer of the day.
Louise Beebe Wilder wrote about
old-fashioned gardens in 1921, and she could have been describing
the old-fashioned garden articles collected in The Once & Future
Gardener when she praised "the charm of their settled repose, their
unaffected simplicity, and their inviting livableness." I highly
recommend this delightful collection. -Amy Stewart
Amy Stewart's garden book From the
Ground Up will be published by Algonquin Books in January 2001.

Sunbelt Gardening: Success in Hot-Weather Climates.
Tom Peace.
Fulcrum Publishing, Golden, Colorado, 2000. 288 pages. 81/2" x 10".
Publisher's price, softcover: $29.95. AHS price: $27.
Buy this book
Gardeners in hot climates may well
gasp in relief after reading Tom Peace's Sunbelt Gardening: Success
in Hot-Weather Climates. Most of us southern and southwestern
gardeners should be familiar with Peace's central theme by now, but
some of us need to be told again: When temperatures soar in the peak
summer months, you should be sitting in the shade, enjoying the
fruits of work performed in the cooler seasons-not planting,
weeding, or fretting over the latest insect invasion.
Peace, a garden designer and
nurseryman, understands that it takes more than a glance at the USDA
Hardiness Zone map to garden successfully in the South and
Southwest. A knowledgeable plantsman, he makes useful suggestions
for maintaining color, beauty and harmonious design in the garden
all year long-something that is more problematic for our neighbors
to the north. His concept of garden "time sharing"-designing and
planting beds with plants that give way to others as the season
progresses-is particularly useful to those with small spaces. He
thoroughly explores the possibilities-beyond pansies and flowering
kale-that southern and southwestern winters offer. He argues
persuasively for making the most of the cooler months, despite the
threat of the occasional freeze.
Peace presents the material in three
main sections: cool season gardening throughout the southern
latitudes; the hot, humid conditions of the Southeast; and the hot,
arid and windy conditions of the Southwest. Along the way he
discusses soil conditions, microclimates, and appropriate plant
material-both exotic and native.
Peace writes in a rather relaxed,
informal style that is nevertheless information packed. In fact, it
might have been helpful to the busy gardener if the editors had cut
a bit of the prose and provided some charts and sidebars for quicker
retrieval of some of the information. Abundant photographs-most of
them by Peace himself-supplement the narrative, and are both useful
and inspiring.
This book is not for the lazy
gardener. Gardening successfully in the Sunbelt requires taking the
initiative to learn about one's climate and soils, as well as the
limitations and opportunities presented by one's garden site. To
garden year round, as Peace advocates, requires strong commitment.
But the appeal will be there for those of us who prefer to spend
torrid summers enjoying our gardens from a shady vantage point as we
dream of the cool season and the possibilities ahead.
-Linda Thornton
Freelance writer, editor, and avid
gardener Linda Thornton lives in Tucumcari, New Mexico.
The books listed here have not been
critically evaluated; they have been chosen for description based on
unusual subject matter or substantive content. Through a partnership
with Amazon.com, AHS members can order books at a discount by
linking to Amazon.com through the Society's Web site at
www.ahs.org.

Roses
The Encyclopedia of Roses. Robert
Markley. Barron's Educational Series,
Inc., Hauppauge, New York, 1999. 240 pages. Publisher's price,
hardcover: $35. AHS price: $28.
Buy this book
This comprehensive guide gives the
reader in-depth information about the history of roses, botanical
details, incorporating roses into the garden, and planting and
nurturing roses. A detailed "Rose Atlas" covers 200 rose selections
for any garden. Hundreds of color photographs depict roses in
archways, in perennial gardens, in floral arrangements, and even in
recipes.

Designing with Roses. Tony Lord.
Trafalgar Square Publishing, North Pomfret, Vermont, 1999. 192
pages. Publisher's price, hardcover: $35. AHS
price: $28.
Buy this book
Tony Lord shows gardeners how to
choose, use, and cultivate roses in Designing with Roses. More than
100 color photographs depict beautiful gardens, such as The Queen's
garden at Sudeley Castle, the Peacock Garden at Warwick Castle, the
Roseraie at L'Ha˙-les-Roses, and the Bagatelle in Paris. The
versatility of the rose and its use in various settings, from the
urban terrace to the kitchen garden, is explored. A detailed
directory of recommended rose varieties for each purpose and site is
included.

Landscaping
The Landscape Makeover Book:
How to Bring New Life to an Old
Yard. Sara Jane von Trapp. Taunton Books, Newtown,
Connecticut, 2000. 170 pages. Publisher's price, softcover: $21.95.
AHS price: $18.50.
Buy this book
Using this book as a guide,
homeowners can give their yards a facelift. Step-by-step
instructions show how to clean up wooded areas, plant trees and
shrubs, reshape planting beds, fix or construct walkways, rejuvenate
decks, and add outdoor lighting. Over 200 color photographs and
illustrations show "before" and "after" pictures of yards that have
been made over.

Pocket Gardens:
Big Ideas for Small Spaces. James
Grayson Trulove.
William Morrow, New York, New York, 2000. 208 pages. Publisher's
price, hardcover: $30. AHS price: $24.
Buy this book
The focus of this book is on small
garden spaces and providing design solutions for modest outdoor
plots. Color photographs and illustrations depict 30 gardens
designed by 20 noted landscape architects. These gardens from all
over the country demonstrate how small garden spaces can be made to
appear larger through the use of such devices as screens and
terraces. This guide offers a multitude of ideas to gardeners
working in confined spaces.

Travel
West Coast Gardenwalks. Alice
Joyce. Michael Kesend Publishing, Ltd, New York, New York, 2000. 242
pages. Publisher's price, softcover: $18.95. AHS price: $18.95.
Buy this book
This guidebook to West Coast gardens
includes gardens from San Diego to Vancouver. Each garden is
described in detail with a section for directions and visiting
information. Included are winery gardens in California's Napa,
Sonoma, and Mendocino counties, plus a host of nurseries with
beautiful display gardens. West Coast Garden Walks is a great
resource of travelers throughout California and the northern Pacific
States.

Edible Gardening

Edible Asian
Garden -
Buy this book
Edible
Mexican Garden -
Buy this book
Edible
Pepper Garden -
Buy this book
Rosalind Creasy. Periplus Editions
(HK) Ltd., Boston, Massachusetts, 2000. 106 pages (each).
Publisher's price, softcover: $14.95 (each). AHS price: $13.
The Edible Garden Series demonstrates
how a large variety of delicious vegetables can be grown in even
modest gardens. In addition to detailed growing information, these
new books are filled with color photographs and culinary tips. A
large recipe section offers instructions for making a variety of
appetizers, soups, salsas, salads, side dishes, and main dishes.

Perennials
Armitage's Garden Perennials:
A Color Encyclopedia. Allan M.
Armitage. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2000. 344 pages.
Publisher's price, hardcover: $49.95. AHS price: $38.
Buy this book
this comprehensive encyclopedia
describes and illustrates 136 genera of herbaceous perennials. Each
listing includes several species and many cultivars along with
excellent color photographs. The author's extensive experience is
evident in his commentary and observation. A section on "Selected
Plants for Specific Characteristics or Purposes" lists the best
choices for cut flowers, drought tolerance, flower color, fragrance,
ground covers, foliage, or fruits.

Summer Reading
In Harmony with Nature: Lessons from the Arts and
Crafts Garden.
Rick Darke. Friedman/Fairfax Publishers, New York, New York, 2000.
160 pages. Publisher's price, hardcover: $35. AHS price: $25.
Buy this book
The origins and concepts of the Arts
and Crafts movement, which began in the mid-18th century, are
examined in this thought-provoking book, which includes outstanding
photographs by the author. Darke explains that while no particular
style defines an Arts and Crafts garden, a reverence for natural
patterns and processes, concern for quality craftsmanship, and
respect for traditions and place were concepts integrated into each
design. Gardens in both England and the United States are featured.
Includes an appendix listing product suppliers, books for further
reading, and places to visit.

In a Green Shade.
Allen Lacy. Houghton Mifflin, Boston, Massachusetts,
2000. 281 pages. Publisher's price, hardcover: $25. AHS price: $21.
Buy this book
Over 100 selections from Lacy's
eight-year-old newsletter, "Homeground," are presented in this new
book. The collection of writings springs from the author's 30 years
of gardening experience at his home in New Jersey, which he has
transformed from a small suburban lot into a landscape that includes
woodland, cottage, container, and deck gardens. In addition to his
lively reflections about individual plants, the author discusses the
seasons, botanical history, Latin pronunciations, and weather
predicting. Black-and-white line drawings are interspersed
throughout.

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