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American Horticultural Society
The American Gardener
May/June 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 May/June 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.

BOOK REVIEWS

Recommendations for Your Gardening Library

GARDENER’S BOOKS

Noteworthy New Titles with a Regional Twist



BOOK REVIEWS
Recommendations for Your Gardening Library


The Gardener’s Palette: Creating Color in the Garden.
The Gardener's PaletteSydney Eddison. Photography by Steve Silk. Contemporary Books, New York, 2003.
233 pages.
Publisher’s price, hardcover: $20.97.
Buy This Book

“In a long gardening life, nothing has given me more pleasure than playing with color schemes in flower beds and containers.”
—Sydney Eddison

Color is the most compelling and least understood aspect of garden design. It provokes strong emotions, draws us to certain plants and creates intriguing gardens, yet our color preferences are as unique as our fingerprints. Many gardeners struggle when it comes to employing color wisely and effectively. Thankfully, Sydney Eddison comes to the rescue.

Eddison is an avid gardener with a painter’s eye and a set designer’s sense of the theatrical. Who better to lead fellow gardeners through the often daunting labyrinth of color theory and to instruct in the artful execution of color schemes for the garden. I had heard Eddison’s excellent lecture on color, so was thrilled when she decided to put her no-nonsense approach into a book. The Gardener’s Palette does not disappoint.

The book unfolds with a gentle discussion of color theory based on the primary and secondary colors of the color wheel. Using shades, tints, and tones of the six basic hues, Eddison explains how artists combine colors for dramatic or subtle effect. Borrowing from nature, master painters such as Monet and Gauguin, and even fabrics, Eddison offers a wealth of examples of successful color schemes that inspire garden combinations.

The book is far from theoretical, however. Each page is filled with practical advice. Using vignettes from her own garden, Eddison compares complementary and harmonious schemes, hot and cool colors, and the visual effects they create. She provides sound advice on how to use popular yet difficult colors such as white and gray, while reminding us that green is a color, too.

Beautiful photographs by Steve Silk deftly illuminate the points made by the eloquent yet practical text. If you want a book to delight your eyes, soothe your soul, and enrich your mind, look no further than The Gardener’s Palette.
—C. Colston Burrell

Landscape designer and author C. Colston Burrell wrote Perennial Combinations (Rodale Press, 1999). He owns and operates Native Landscape Design and Restoration near Charlottesville, Virginia.


 

Consider the LeafConsider the Leaf: Foliage in Garden Design.
Judy Glattstein. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2003.
327 pages.
Publisher’s price, hardcover: $17.47.
Buy This Book

Except for a few perpetually blooming annuals, flower displays in the garden are ephemeral. Once the blossoms have faded, what you’ve got left is the foliage. A well-designed garden focuses as much attention on foliage as it does on any floral display. In Consider the Leaf: Foliage in Garden Design, author Judy Glattstein teaches readers how to combine foliage plants so that the garden will look great whether or not plants are in bloom.
Glattstein outlines principles for combining plants: contrast, balance, color, and textural variation. Her authoritative prose is embellished with over 110 color photographs, illustrating the dramatic and varied effects that can be achieved with foliage combinations.

My one complaint as a great user of indexes is that this one falls short. Plants mentioned in the book are listed by both their common and botanical names. But if you want to find, for example, the passage explaining the terminology for describing leaf shapes—very helpful if you find such descriptions as “hastate with pinnate venation,” to be incomprehensible—you’ll have to leaf through the book to locate it. Other gems of information are also buried within the text in unexpected places. A more detailed index would have been invaluable.

Much of the advice offered in the book is based on Glattstein’s personal experience or that of her friends, colleagues, and acquaintances, so it has both the ring of authority and the charm of anecdote. The book is rich with examples of visually arresting leafy plant combinations, and information is given about each plant’s growth habit and overall size; its leaf color, shape, and texture; as well as tidbits on care. Readers of Consider the Leaf will find themselves well armed with information and ideas for using foliage as an effective and critical design element in their garden.
—Catriona Tudor Erler

Catriona Tudor Erler’s most recent garden books are Poolscaping: Gardening and Landscaping Around Your Swimming Pool and Spa, The Frugal Gardener, and Complete Home Landscaping. She writes and gardens in Vienna, Virginia.

 


GARDENER’S BOOKS
Noteworthy New Titles with a Regional Twist

Gardening books that focus on a particular region can home in on the climate, soil, and indigenous plants of their specific locale with a lot more detail than most general references. This regional orientation is extremely helpful to both gardeners and visitors who share an interest in the trials and joys of gardening and nature in that part of the country. Whether you live in the cool Northwest or the sultry Southeast there are new books that address your corner of the world, its natural environment, and gardening possibilities.

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 by selecting "Buy this Book."

Big Ideas for Northwest Small GardensOur tour of titles begins out West, with Marty Wingate’s Big Ideas for Northwest Small Gardens (Sasquatch Books, 2003, $15.37). Wingate, a Master Gardener and weekly garden columnist for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, explains how gardeners can make the most of small spaces, from front and side yard landscapes to balcony, rooftop, and patio gardens, all with a distinctly Northwest perspective. The 80 color photographs by Jacqueline Koch illustrate garden concepts and specific plants.
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Dig This!Another book that West Coast gardeners may want to check out is Dig This: Landscaping without a Backhoe or a Big Budget for Northern California and Beyond (Sasquatch Books, 2003, $13.97) by landscape designer and contractor, Kate Anchordoguy, who offers readers the benefit of 25 years of landscaping experience in Northern California. In her easy prose, which is often spiked with humor, she presents a down-to-earth approach to design, construction, and maintenance. The step-by-step advice is punctuated with lots of practical tips and helpful line drawings.
Buy This Book



 

Wisconsin's Natural CommunitiesMidwest gardeners and naturalists will find Randy Hoffman’s Wisconsin’s Natural Communities: How to Recognize Them, Where to Find Them (University of Wisconsin Press, 2002, $17.47), a useful reference to understanding and appreciating the habitats of indigenous plants, birds and other wildlife. The ecology of each community is accompanied by detailed maps, and lists of characteristic species of plants, mosses and lichens, mushrooms, insects, reptiles, mammals, and birds. Whether you live or plan to travel in Wisconsin, this volume will enhance your exploration of its natural environment.
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Pennsylvania's Gardener's GuideWith the Pennsylvania Gardeners Guide (Cool Springs Press, 2002, $17.49) by Liz Ball, Cool Springs Press continues to expand its list of regional gardening titles. Offering both garden history and current plant selection and gardening advice, the guide serves as a useful reference. Ball addresses endangered and threatened native plants as well as invasive non-natives. Also included are Pennsylvania “Gardens to Visit.”
Buy This Book

 

 

 

Mid-Atlantic Gardener's GuideFollowing a similar format, the Mid-Atlantic Gardener’s Guide (Cool Springs Press, 2002, $17.49) by Jacqueline Heriteau and André and Mark Viette, includes details on growing the best plants for USDA Hardiness Zones 5, 6, 7, and 8.
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An Outdoor Guide to Bartram's TravelsOur tour heads southward and back in time, with a book that will appeal to naturalists and history buffs alike. An Outdoor Guide to Bartram’s Travels (University of Georgia Press, 2003, $13.97), by Charles D. Spornick, Alan R. Cattier, and Robert J. Greene reconstructs William Bartram’s journey through the American South from 1773 to 1777, as he documented the flora, fauna, cultures, and topography of that then-unexplored part of the world. From the Carolinas to Florida and west to the Mississippi River, the authors invite today’s travelers to follow the same route—by car or bicycle, or as Bartram traveled, by foot, canoe, or horseback. Divided into discreet tours, the guide offers details on the natural environment as well as manmade modifications that have changed the southern landscape over the past two centuries.
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The Natural Gardens of North CarolinaNatural Gardens of North Carolina (University of North Carolina Press, 2002, $15.37) by B. W. Wells is the re-release of a classic about North Carolina’s native plants, their habitats, and communities. Originally published in 1932, it has been updated with new line drawings, color photographs, botanical nomenclature, and an introduction and afterword.

Wells was a pioneer in the concept of plant communities and conservation. This volume identifies and discusses the major natural gardens in North Carolina ranging from the seaside community to the high mountain boreal forests. It also includes detailed descriptions of the wildflowers found within the state.
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Gardening with the Native Plants of TennesseeIncorporating indigenous southern wildflowers, ferns, vines, shrubs, and trees into your garden is the subject of Gardening with Native Plants of Tennessee: The Spirit of Place (University of Tennessee Press, 2002, $24.47), by Margie Hunter. In Part I, Hunter discusses Tennessee’s geographic regions, plant communities, and wildlife. She also covers endangered native plants and exotic pests. Part II focuses on gardening with Tennessee natives. Descriptions, cultural information, and natural distribution of plants are provided in detail. Small but helpful color photographs accompany plant descriptions. Appendices include organizations, nurseries, botanical gardens, and plant conferences through which interested readers can obtain further information.
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Texas TreesOur tour proceeds to Texas with Howard Garrett’s Texas Trees (Lone Star Books, 2002, $20.97). Garrett provides thorough descriptions of native trees as well as what he considers the best introductions, with details on natural habitats, preferred sites, planting and maintenance, culture, problems, and propagation. For each tree he offers personal insight, both positive and negative. Appendices list trees with various qualities, as well as “Worst Texas Trees.” Also included are organic remedies and treatments for disease and pest problems and a glossary.
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Month-By_Month Gardening in the Desert SouthwestWinding up our tour is Month-by-Month Gardening in the Desert Southwest (Cool Springs Press, 2002, $13.99) by Mary Irish. Irish presents basic gardening practices that will produce successful results in desert landscapes, as well as chapters that feature annuals; bulbs, corms, rhizomes, and tubers; cacti, succulents, and other desert perennials, grasses, shrubs, trees, vegetables, and herbs.
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Month-By-Month Gardening in MississippiA similar title for an entirely different gardening locale is Month-by-Month Gardening in Mississippi (Cool Springs Press, 2002, $13.99) by Bob Polomski, edited by Felder Rushing.
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The above books represent just a few of the wonderful regional resources available to gardeners and naturalists. There are certainly many more, both old and new, that will help your gardening endeavors wherever you live.

—Rita Pelczar, Associate Editor

 

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