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American Horticultural Society
The American Gardener
January/February 2003 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 January/February 2003 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 BOOKS


BOOKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT


Orchid Growing for Wimps.
Ellen Zachos. Sterling Publishing Company, New York, New York, 2002. 128 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $12.57. Buy This Book

Orchids and Their Conservation.
Harold Koopowitz. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2001. 176 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $27.97. Buy This Book

Ultimate Orchid.
Thomas J. Sheehan, in cooperation with the Smithsonian Institution and the American Orchid Society. DK Publishing, New York, New York, 2001. 160 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $17.47. Buy This Book

C
learly patterned after the wildly popular Dummies series, Orchid Growing for Wimps gives a fairly good treatment of how folks with other houseplants can grow orchids—at least some orchids—right alongside. And this makes sense, because so many of our commonly grown houseplants grow right alongside orchids in nature. The book contains a few misspellings and, well, it is fir bark used for orchid media and not pine bark, but overall this is a good way for the aspiring orchid grower to get his or her feet wet.

The section specifically for “wimps” is quite good, and the “don’t try this at home” section offers particularly welcome advice. But I personally disagree with the inclusion of dendrobiums as a group for beginners. Too many new growers start out with plants that are destined to fail and disappoint. Zachos generally provides a real service in steering novices away from this sort of plant.

Orchids and their Consersvation is not a book for the beginner, but for those seeking a solid treatment of the orchid family by one of the most knowledgeable “orchid guys” of our time.

Harold Koopowitz devotes wonderfully readable chapters to explanations of what makes an orchid an orchid, their ecology, their role in the larger ecosystem, and concerns about their conservation. He is extraordinarily well informed on CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) and gives a thorough analysis of how this complex treaty affects the orchid trade. The coverage of specific plants and their conservation is particularly interesting, as Koopowitz’s intimate knowledge of the plants lends a depth to the presentation unavailable anywhere else in print.

For those who want to know and understand orchids and their place in modern conservation-related thought, this book is a must.

Tom Sheehan, author of Ultimate Orchid, is one of our foremost orchid experts. This is a splendid book, almost a paragon of what an orchid book should be. The photography, representing the best from the vast photo collection of the American Orchid Society, as well as outstanding selections from the Smithsonian archives, simply cannot be faulted. The captioning is accurate and clear.

A university professor, Sheehan has spent his career educating horticulturists and it shows in this book. History, morphology, classification, and variability are presented with exceptional clarity. Sheehan’s overview of the various alliances is detailed yet concise, offering a comprehensive view of today’s spectrum of widely available orchids. His thoughts about conservation are right on the money. Also of great value is the section on general care of orchids, with some of the best and most illustrative photos I have seen.

These three books represent a good cross-section of the spectrum of orchid books available today. In the end, the final assessment of a book is whether or not you would buy it or recommend it to your friends. As a career orchid grower, I would buy the latter two books, and I would recommend, with qualifications, Orchid Growing for Wimps to a novice orchid grower.
—Ned Nash

Ned Nash has made a career of growing, studying and writing about orchids. He is director of conservation for the American Orchid Society in Delray Beach, Florida.


For more information about orchids, including an extensive listing of available books on all topics relating to these plants, visit the American Orchid Society (AOS) Web site at http://orchidweb.org/.

 

Alpine Plants of North America.
Graham Nicholls. Rick Lupp, consulting editor. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2002. 344 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $34.975. Buy This Book

Almost any week from late winter to autumn, somewhere in Great Britain or Ireland, you can find a lavish plant show offering immaculate pots brimming with perfectly grown, rare alpine plants. Tables groan with alpine daphnes covered with thousands of flowers, Himalayan primroses galore, and immense, symmetrical cushions of Dionysia—cousins to rock jasmine (Androsace spp.)—from Iran.
But if you are looking for American alpines at these shows, you will be frustrated. You will quite certainly encounter a number of superbly grown Lewisia or Douglasia species and an occasional trillium or gangly calochortus. But the daisies, Indian paintbrushes, penstemons, phloxes, milkvetches, buckwheats, and cresses that paint the alpine meadows of the Rockies, Sierras, and Cascades like a surrealistic canvas are almost excluded.

Graham Nicholls’ book should do much to shine a spotlight on these glorious and insufficiently valued resources. It is not as encyclopedic as its front cover boasts: Ferns, sedges, and grasses; succulents like sedums, Rhodiola, and cacti; as well as practically all dwarf woody subjects such as Cassiope and Kalmia are conspicuously absent. But there is a superabundance of the major groups of wildflowers that grow at the highest elevations, particularly those with a compact habit and showy blooms.

Any such ambitious effort can be expected to have a few blemishes. For instance, the photograph on page 44 is mislabeled Aquilegia saximontana—the flowers on true A. saximontana have an unmistakable color and shape and are always nodding, unlike this pale, upfacing impostor. The text implies that Astragalus coccineus is restricted to the White Mountains of California, but it has a much wider range that includes the Sierra Nevada. And Zauschneria garrettii does not grow in California. There are other factual inaccuracies, but to give Nicholls credit, his book has a far lower percentage of errors than, say, Harold Rickett’s monumental wildflower encyclopedias produced a few decades ago.

Nicholls has spent an enormous amount of time gathering information, making lists, and taking photographs. His tips for germinating seed and growing plants in pots are authoritative and invaluable to anyone who yearns to grow our native alpine gems. Best of all, he has actually grown a large portion of the plants he covers, thus his descriptions are precise and they glow with an honest enthusiasm. Thanks to this book, we can look forward to many more American alpines on the benches of the English plant shows—and hopefully in our gardens here as well. m
—Panayoti Kelaidis

Panayoti Kelaidis is curator of plant collections at the Denver Botanic Garden, where he created the world-renowned Rock Alpine Garden.





 

GARDENER'S BOOKS:

Noteworthy New Titles
There are many more new books on the market than we have time or space to review, but here are a few that recently caught our eye. Through a partnership with amazon.com, AHS members can order these and other books at a discount by linking to amazon.com through the Society’s Web site at www.ahs.org.

 

Remarkable Trees of the World.
Thomas Pakenham. W. W. Norton & Company, New York, New York, 2002. 192 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $49.95. Buy This Book

In this informative and inspiring book, which spans four continents and two decades of research, historian and photographer Thomas Pakenham shares his passion for some of the world’s most dramatic trees as well as his concern for their survival. Chapters cover giant trees, tiny trees, old trees, historic trees, and trees in peril. Each tree has a story, which Pakenham reveals through historical anecdotes and exquisite photographs.

The hollowed interior of the Chene-Chapelle (Chapel Oak), located in Allouville, Normandy, has served as a chapel since the late 17th century. This unusual specimen has survived a revolution, lightning, and disease. Pakenham describes it and every other tree he visits, with an honest appreciation and a measure of awe for nature’s majesty.

 

Making Gardens Works of Art:
Creating Your Own Personal Paradise.

Keeyla Meadows. Sasquatch Books, Seattle, Washington, 2002. 128 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $15.37. Buy This Book

Award-winning designer and artist Keeyla Meadows shows you how to create your own style in the garden by combining plants and art in tasteful, colorful, and sometimes flamboyant arrangements. Included are discussions of such design considerations as elevation, focal points, connectors, harmony, and contrast. Color in the garden and effective use of space are examined in depth.

Meadows’ colorful photographs highlight her exuberant style. Her use of art may have you looking at your landscape in a new light as you consider non-traditional uses of such everyday items as shovels, or the effect of combining a variety of paving materials into a single pathway. She challenges you to think outside of the box when it comes to garden art and artistic garden design.

 

The Plants that Shaped Our Gardens.
David Stuart. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2002. 208 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $27.97. Buy This Book

David Stuart’s selective history of the plant movement focuses on plant explorers and the treasures they sought, found, collected, and shared. It is also an account of how garden styles were influenced by the introduction of plants from foreign lands. Chapters cover such topics as “Treasures of the East,” “The American Garden,” and “From the Wilderness to the Rose Garden.”

Stuart explains how certain plantsmen were “networkers” who had contacts with botanists throughout the civilized world and who were driving forces in the exchange of plants between the new world and the old.

By relating the amazing and sometimes harrowing details of how plants were collected and introduced into cultivation, this book offers an enriching perspective about the plants we grow.

 

 

Natural Landscaping: Designing with Native Plant Communities.
John Diekelmann and Robert Schuster. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, 2002. 301 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $17.475. Buy This Book

This revised edition of a popular reference, first published 20 years ago, has been updated and expanded to reflect changes in plant nomenclature, information technology, and environmental concerns such as invasive plant species. Also added is a chapter about a specific restoration project in central Wisconsin and its meaning to the community in terms of an expanded appreciation of both the natural world and human history in the region.

Private, public, and commercial landscapes are addressed, and a step-by-step approach directs gardeners from site analysis through designing a plan for a variety of conditions. Both color and black and white photographs illustrate plants and plant communities. Extensive appendices list plants and places to observe natural plant communities.

 

 

The Botanical Garden, Volume I: Trees and Shrubs.
The Botanical Garden, Volume II: Perennials and Annuals.

Roger Phillips and Martyn Rix. Firefly Books, Westport, Connecticut, 2002. Volume I: 492 pages; Buy This Book
Volume II: 540 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $52.50 per volume. Buy This Book

 

A resource for serious gardeners, horticultural students, and garden and landscape professionals, these two volumes include entries on over 1,000 genera of plants, with more than 4,000 color photographs.

Entries include botanical and common names, date of discovery, range, key recognition features, and evolutionary relationships. By supplying the month and day photographs were taken, readers can observe seasonal variability within each plant. Also included is information about plant explorers, history, ecology, and plant lore. Plants are classified by family and are listed in evolutionary order.

 

Forget not Mee & My Garden…”:
Selected Letters 1725–1768 of Peter Collinson, F.R.S.

Alan W. Armstrong, editor. American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, 2002. 300 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $60. Buy This Book

Peter Collinson was a London cloth merchant in the 18th century who conducted a massive international business in plant imports, particularly with his connections in the American colonies. His letters reveal a great deal about the gardening of his day, as well as history, geology, botany, and zoology. Among his correspondents were John and William Bartram, Benjamin Franklin, and Carl Linnaeus. Collinson’s enthusiasm for the exchange of knowledge provides interesting and insightful reading for the garden history buff. The book is illustrated in color with beautifully rendered historical prints of people, plants, animals, and places.


 

 

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