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American Horticultural Society
The American Gardener
November/December 2002 Recommended Garden Books

Because the AHS Horticultural Book Service was discontinued as of June 30, 2000 no further phone or mail orders are filled. However, AHS members are 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 November/December 2002 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

GARDENER'S GIFT BOOKS


BOOKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Gardens of Use and Delight: Uniting the Practical and the Beautiful in an Integrated Landscape.
Jigs and Jo Ann Gardner. Illustrated by Elayne Sears. Fulcrum Publishing, Golden, Colorado, 2002. 304 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $20.97
Buy This Book

More than 30 years ago, Jigs and Jo Ann Gardner bought a vacant farm on Cape Breton Island, attracted by its hillside site, remnant apple orchard, and handful of surviving perennials and flowering shrubs. They planted dozens of fruit trees and bushes that first year, the genesis of a later jam business and the source of many future meals. Although clearly useful, those apples, plums, pears, blueberries, currants, elderberries, blackberries, and raspberries were also the beginnings of their efforts to create beauty in their surroundings.

Over time, the Gardners rescued the surviving apple trees, and added extensive vegetable, herb, and flower gardens. These are lovingly captured in dozens of charming water colors by Elayne Sears. But this is not a story about waving a magic checkbook and acquiring an instant garden. Rather, it relates the evolution of a landscape planted by two people who wanted to enjoy the daily walk to the barn, the woodshed, the chicken coop, and the mailbox—while feeding their family of six, and producing jams, herbs, flowers, cheese, eggs, bacon, and other products for sale.

Divided into three parts, the book begins with an overview of the farm as it is today, with reflections on how it has changed over the years since the Gardners purchased the property.

The bulk of the book—“The Gardens”—describes each garden area and how it has evolved, with lists of favorite vegetables, fruit, annuals, perennials, roses, and herbs. The book sometimes feels as though it’s from a distant century, recounting as it does a life rooted in one place. “The Kitchen Garden” is filled with favorite family recipes for preserving the garden’s bounty, enticing reminders of a time when people routinely practiced the nearly-lost art of canning. “An Old-Fashioned Fruit Garden” includes frugal methods for producing sumptuous results, such as apple ginger, black currant sorbet, blueberry preserves, and rhubarb marmalade.
In “Part Three: The Integrated Landscape,” practical issues are addressed. “The Growing Guide” offers techniques and strategies that have proven successful, from controlling diseases and insects to saving seed. The final chapter, “A Summary of Practical & Aesthetic Principles,” neatly merges the many topics covered in the book into a simple philosophy: that a garden should develop according to life’s needs, with accommodations for change, rather than from a static, predetermined blueprint.

The impetus for the book is the Gardners’ desire to pass along their concept of an integrated landscape: simplicity is a virtue, time is your ally; don’t make separate realms for flowers and the productive areas of a landscape. Instead, unify the practical and the beautiful in a satisfying whole.
—Renée Beaulieu

Renée Beaulieu is the internet editor for White Flower Farm nursery in Litchfield, Connecticut.


 

Bulbs, Revised Edition.
John E. Bryan. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2002. 896 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $89.95.
Buy This Book

The trouble with revised editions is that they always need to be compared with the original. And in this case the competition is stiff—the first edition of Bryan’s Bulbs, published in 1989, was named one of 75 Great American Garden books by the American Horticultural Society. But the second edition outshines its predecessor. In short, Bryan has made a great book even better.

Like the earlier edition, this book covers both hardy and tender bulbs, making it the most complete reference available on geophytes—plants that grow from underground organs, including true bulbs, corms, rhizomes, and tubers.
Without doubt, the encyclopedia is the book’s most important feature, though there is plenty of front matter to keep you busy and increase your knowledge. Concise yet fairly complete chapters cover History, Botany and Classification, Propagation, Cultivation Techniques, Bulbs in the Landscape, and Pests and Diseases. Growing Bulbs Out of Season describes forcing techniques for both enthusiasts and commercial growers.

The alphabetical listing of genera includes popular bulbs such as Crocus, Dahlia, and Tulipa, as well as collector’s plants like Fritillaria and Trillium. My favorite native and exotic bulbs are all covered, as are dozens of lesser-known selections destined to become new garden treasures. In all, more than 5,000 species in 230 genera are included. Although the classification of hybrid groups in popular genera such as Narcissus is included, the book is primarily a reference to species and their most prominent cultivars. The no-nonsense text is seldom terse and at times is relaxed and lyrical. Excellent botanical descriptions and historical notes accompany each generic entry, along with cultural information, propagation techniques, and pests and diseases.

The second edition features a number of improvements. The best news—for those with good upper arm strength—is that two volumes have been condensed into one. Topping the list of substantive changes is the expanded encyclopedia coverage. Next on the list is the increased number of photographs and beautiful botanical illustrations—nearly twice as many as before. The up-to-date taxonomy is particularly helpful, and reflects the breakup of the lily family (Liliaceae) and the realignment of the amaryllis family (Amaryllidaceae). Check the complete list of synonyms to keep abreast of name changes.

What’s missing, you ask? Very little. Keys to the genera and species would have been useful for serious bulb students. The lack of an index may not seem a hardship at first (considering that the encyclopedia is alphabetic by botanical name), but it makes finding information outside the encyclopedia a bit cumbersome.
Some gardeners may be taken aback by the omission of USDA hardiness zones. Although I think zones inhibit gardeners from experimenting, this book covers tender and hardy bulbs, as well as widely divergent species, so zones would have been helpful to less-experienced gardeners. Minimum temperature is given for each genus, which provides some indication of hardiness and makes the book broadly applicable to readers outside North America.
At a cover price of $89.95, this volume is not for everyone. Bulbs will have strong appeal to curious amateurs and ambitious gardeners; it is a must for serious bulb enthusiasts.
—C. Colston Burell

Landscape designer and author C. Colston Burrell, who has written several books on herbaceous perennials and wildflowers, owns and operates Native Landscape Design and Restoration located near Charlottesville, Virginia.
 

 


GARDENER'S GIFT BOOKS

Need a good holiday gift idea for a gardener? Take a look at the following new titles. Whether the gardener on your list enjoys tales of plants from around the world, wants to encourage backyard wildlife, or seeks a bit of advice about incorporating art into the landscape, the information and inspiration they need can be found between the covers of the following new books.


The City Gardener’s Handbook.
Linda Yang. Storey Books, North Adams, Massachusetts, 2002. 317 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $3.97.
Buy This Book

This practical guide to urban gardening will help you get big results from a small space. In her down-to- earth, practical style, Yang covers design, planting, and maintenance, from soil preparation and coping with wind, to plant selection and size control.

Originally published in 1990, this edition has been expanded to include new drawings, garden plans, and updated advice on organic techniques and pest control. Several detailed plans and abundant garden photographs illustrate the ideas and techniques presented.

 

The American Horticultural Society Encyclopedia of Plants and Flowers.
Christopher Brickell and Trevor Cole, editors. Dorling Kindersley, New York, New York, 2002. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $42.
Buy This Book

Like the other encyclopedic books published by DK in association with the American Horticultural Society, this definitive guide to flowering plants is destined to become one of the most thumbed references on your garden bookshelf.
It is filled with more than 4,000 full-color photographs and contains practical and down-to-earth advice on every conceivable garden topic from propagation to planting, fertilizing, pruning, and controlling pests and diseases. Buy one for yourself and give a second copy to that favorite gardener in your life.



 

Attracting Butterflies & Hummingbirds to Your Backyard.
Sally Roth. Rodale Books, Emmaus, Pennsylvania, 2001. 304 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $11.87.
Buy This Book
 

 

 


 

The Bird Lover’s Garden.
Margaret MacAvoy and Pat Kite. Friedman/Fairfax Publishers, distributed by Sterling Publishing Co., New York, 2001.128 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $17.95.
Buy This Book

Both the above volumes discuss the advantages of sharing your garden with birds, and techniques to make them welcome. Both suggest plants and structures that encourage avian visitors by providing food and nesting sites. And both include richly colored photographs of birds and gardens.

Roth’s book examines the many species of hummingbirds and includes butterflies as well. A discussion of their behavior will enhance your appreciation for these winged creatures as they travel from flower to flower. Roosting, puddling, migrating, and mating habits are also covered. A gallery of both butterflies and hummingbirds will help you identify each species that answers your invitation.
The book by MacAvoy and Kite covers many different kinds of birds from the eastern bluebird to the western tanager. It also provides information on the plants that will attract them and suggests ways of providing a year-round diet for your avian guests. Regional lists of birds will help readers look for and identify those species that are indigenous to—or migratory through—their region.

 

The American Woodland Garden.
Rick Darke. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2002. 378 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $34.97.
Buy This Book

In this new book, designer, photographer, and award-winning author Rick Darke shares his love of the eastern deciduous forest through his stunning photographs and insightful prose, making the ordinary seem remarkable. Nature’s seasonal transitions become a magical journey that the reader is invited to witness.
Color photographs of the author’s garden help readers understand the importance of detail: sunlight filtered through the spring canopy; the stark and stunning sculpture of winter branches against the sky; and the mosaic patterns of autumn leaves on the forest floor. Included is an alphabetical listing of plants—together with photographs—to help the reader recreate a garden that reflects this spirit of the woodland. (AHS members may read an article adapted from this book by clicking here).

 


 

 

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