The American Gardener
 
 


American Horticultural Society
The American Gardener
July/August 2004 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 July/August 2004 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

Summer Reading


BOOK REVIEWS
Recommendations for Your Gardening Library

Garden Insects of North America: The Ultimate Guide to Backyard Bugs.
Whitney Cranshaw. Princeton Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 2004. 656 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $20.37.

Buy This Book

Insects are ever present in our gardens and yards. When we find them, we want to know what they are, whether they are potentially damaging to our homes and gardens, and what steps—if any—we should take to control them. Whitney Cranshaw’s new book, Garden Insects of North Americas, has now made this process much easier for gardeners.

Cranshaw has produced an impressive garden reference that doubles as a field guide. Wherever you live in North America, your insects are included here. This text is well researched and covers 1,420 species of yard and garden pests. There is also a substantial section on beneficial insects, so we can recognize and encourage their presence.

Easy to follow and organized in a systematic fashion, the book’s chapters are arranged according to the type of plant damage and which plant part is affected. Thus, leaf chewers and sapsuckers are given the largest chapters. Cranshaw also includes a taxonomic discussion of the pests and detailed information about signs of damage, their favorite plants, life history, and habits. The more than 1,400 color pictures of insects and their damage are truly impressive and will be invaluable in helping readers track down the culprits of their plant injury.

One limitation of this book is that it does not give specific management information for all insects listed. However, Cranshaw discusses management for the most common groups of insects, and in some cases specific insects, such as Japanese beetles. So the odds are that most readers will find the information they need to tackle their insect pest problems. Control techniques are presented in an integrated pest management approach that incorporates cultural, biological, mechanical, and chemical mechanisms.

This wonderful reference will certainly become a classic alongside works such as Cynthia Wescott’s The Gardener’s Bug Book. Whether you are a professional or a home gardening enthusiast, this is an indispensable reference.

Jeffrey Hahn

A professor of entomology with the University of Minnesota Extension Service, Jeffrey Hahn specializes in insects commonly found in urban homes and gardens.


 

The Passion for Gardening.
Ken Druse. Clarkson N. Potter Press, New York, New York. 2003, 256 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $34.

Buy This Book

As an unabashed how-to kind of person, I was initially a bit reluctant to review what I thought would be a pretty coffee table book. But once I started reading The Passion for Gardening by Ken Druse, I was almost immediately charmed by the author’s relaxed, personal writing style. Perhaps it was Druse’s analogy comparing the making of a garden to creating a sand castle on the beach, or his description of a garden is a living work of art—always changing, an act in progress that is never finished.

This is a “why to” rather than a “how to” book, yet some “how to” couldn’t help but come through, as gardeners are always ready to share their wisdom. In the section “You Can Take It With You,” Druse offers practical advice on how to effectively transplant trees, shrubs, and perennials. And, in another section, he describes how he converted lawn to garden by smothering the turf with mulch-covered cardboard in a variant on the classic “lasagna” gardening technique.
The plainspoken anecdotes and opinions throughout the book reminded me that gardeners have a lot in common. I related strongly to Druse’s discomfort when asked about his favorite plant—he compares it to asking a parent which child they favor. When Druse discussed a pair of old cycads that he’s had since he lived in his first college apartment in 1975, it made me think of a now portly jade plant that I started from a single leaf cutting in my college plant propagation class in 1978.
Druse’s personal writing style comes through most strongly in a section titled “Junior Partner,” where he invites readers into his own garden of nine years by way of a diary of his visions for the garden. I found myself sharing both his excitement and reservations, and mourning with him over the tolls nature had taken along the way.

As with Druse’s other acclaimed garden books, the text is paired with equally rich photographs taken by the author and Adam Levine. Among the more than 250 images, the most memorable for me include the cacti chorus, the moss stairway, and the spectacular views of the garden at Chanticleer.

This inspiring garden book, which received the American Horticultural Society’s 2004 Book Award, reminds us all that our gardens will become our own as we develop our own personal style and taste for individual plants and design schemes. We are never too young or too old to garden. There’s no question that Druse chose the perfect title for a book in which he shares and promotes his unabashed passion for gardening.

B. Rosie Lerner

An avid writer and gardener, B. Rosie Lerner is the consumer horticulture Extension Specialist at Purdue University’s Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture.


 


Uncommon Fruits for Every Garden.
Lee Reich, Timber Press, Inc., Portland, Oregon, 2004. 308 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $16.97.

Buy This Book

Tired of the same-old same-old? Need some fresh new flavors to jazz up your low-fat, high-fiber diet? Check out Lee Reich’s Uncommon Fruits for Every Garden, an expanded sequel to his highly regarded Uncommon Fruits Worthy of Attention, published in 1991.

Reich presents 23 fruits that have, for one reason or another, been largely overlooked and underplanted by American gardeners. His criteria for inclusion are “that a fruit be able to tolerate winter cold, be uncommon, and—most importantly—be good for fresh eating.” Many of the fruits covered are also valued for cooking.
Reliable cultural information on uncommon fruits can be difficult to come by, and having it in a single source is very handy. Reich’s prose is flavored with humor and anecdotes—good reading as you plan your own backyard orchard. His advice and opinions are based on years of growing experience.

Each chapter covers one fruit, including a brief botanical history. A concise description of both the overall plant and its fruit provides both landscape and culinary attributes; after all, this book is intended primarily for backyard gardeners, and the ornamental quality of an edible plant is a distinct asset. Practical cultivation information—site considerations, spacing, fertilizing, pruning, etc.—are clearly presented, followed by propagation methods, harvesting, and use. This information enhanced in several appendices.

The subjects include North American natives such as Juneberry (Amelanchier spp.), pawpaw (Asimina triloba), persimmon (Diospyros virginiana), and lowbush blueberries (Vaccinium angustifolium) more often observed in the wild than in cultivation. Reich suggests that readers reconsider them as a source of good eating, suitable for cultivating in backyard gardens.

Some of the “uncommon fruits” are, or were, actually quite familiar in other cultures. Ancient Greeks and Romans grew the Cornelian cherry (Cornus mas) for its fruit, and medlars (Mespilus germanica)—which resemble small russeted apples—were popular in Europe during the Middle Ages. About jujube (Ziziphus jujuba), Reich says, “If this book were written in China, this chapter would be omitted. The Chinese have been eating jujubes for more than four thousand years." And reflecting on lingonberries (Vaccinium vitis-idaea) he says, “Merely utter the word ‘lingonberry’ to someone Scandinavian and watch for a smile on their lips and a dreamy look in their eye."

Perhaps the most exotic entry—certainly the least familiar to me—is shipova (5Sorbopyrus auricularis), an intergeneric hybrid of the European pear and a species of Sorbus, probably S. aria, the common whitebeam. Reich states that “although shipova fruit is pear-like in flavor and appearance, its whitebeam parent has not necessarily been an idle onlooker in developing that flavor.” My curiosity is sufficiently tweaked. I guess I’ll have to grow it myself! Fortunately, Reich has included an appendix of mail-order sources for each fruit.

For those gardeners who, like me, are always searching for something a bit out of the ordinary for both their gardens and their tummies, this book is a gem.

Rita Pelczar

Formerly associate editor of The American Gardener, Rita Pelczar writes and gardens in Chesapeake Beach, Maryland.



 

Revised Southern Living Garden Book

The newly revised edition of the Southern Living Garden Book (Oxmoor House, Birmingham, Alabama, 2004. 720 pages. Publisher’s price, softcover: $27.17), edited by Southern Living’s senior writer Steve Bender, is a comprehensive garden encyclopedia for those living in all 17 states in the South. This useful reference breaks down southern growing regions into five discrete climate zones and offers information on more than 7,000 plants, which are augmented by 1,300 color photographs, 1,200 color illustrations and plenty of vital information on origin, habit and culture.

Within its pages readers will also find a lengthy how-to dictionary of techniques and a wealth of tips from some of the South’s most renowned gardening experts. A large section called “Resource Directory” provides listings of botanical gardens in the South to visit, mail-order sources for plants, a glossary of gardening terms, and a useful discussion on “Solving the Mystery of Botanical Names.” Some of this book’s more substantial additions include 2,000 new plant listings as well as USDA Hardiness Zone and AHS Heat Zone designations. This is a vital reference for all gardeners in the American South.

Buy This Book



 


GARDENER’S BOOKS

Summer Reading

The lazy days of summer are here, and if you’re a gardener who misses plants and getting soil under your nails while you’re vacationing at the beach or in a cabin in the woods, just take along one of the books listed here. The staff of The American Gardener has selected them based on overall interest, entertainment value, and ease of reading.

garden literature anthologies

Fine bedtime reading, The Garden of Reading, subtitled “An Anthology of 20th Century Short Fiction about Gardens and Gardeners,” edited by Michele Slung (The Overlook Press, Woodstock, New York, 2004. $24.95), is a bouquet of many and varied stories. In each one—“Blue Poppies,” “The Lawnmower Man,” “A Curtain of Green,” “The Fig Tree”—the way people interface with the natural world is the starting point, the setting, or the crisis of tales by authors such as Colette, Eudora Welty, Steven King, James Thurber, and Barbara Pym.

Buy This Book



In American Garden Writing: An Anthology, edited by Bonnie Marranca (Taylor Trade Publishing, New York, 2003, $13.27), gardeners will find American garden history served up in thick, delicious slices. Each entry is meaty, but short. From George Washington (“The more I am acquainted with agricultural affairs, the better I am pleased with them”) to J.I. Rodale (“One of these fine days the public is going to wake up and…pay…for high quality products such as those raised by organic methods.”), this collection allows us to see how we came to garden as we do.

Buy This Book

Carole Ottesen, Associate Editor

 

 

garden experience

Urban professionals Kimberly Schaye and Christopher Losee made a dramatic life change in 1996 when they decided to chuck the city noise, lights, and bustle of New York City for the not-so-simple life as greenmarket farmers in the Hudson Valley. In Stronger Than Dirt (Three Rivers Press, New York, 2003. $11.20), they chronicle the ups and downs of starting and running their new business. Despite the laborious hurdles the authors had to cross, reading the book made me want to buy a nice big plot of land and start a small working farm full of cool specialty herbs, vegetables, and flowers.

The narrative shifts from Losee’s to Schaye’s voice throughout the book, and both offer incisive, often humorous stories that follow their path towards becoming successful farmers. One of the more amusing features is Schaye’s top 10 list of everything that went wrong with their first day at market, including number 10: “This whole thing looks about as professional as a ten-year-old’s lemonade stand.” The market tables turned shortly afterwards, though, when they found success and started to earn sufficient profits.

This inspiring, funny, and well-written book is just right for a good afternoon read in the summer—filling, yet not overindulgent.

Buy This Book

Jessie Keith, Editorial Intern

 

 

plant history and lore

In addition to authoring the Declaration of Independence and serving as the third United States president, Thomas Jefferson was also a seasoned gardener. In Jefferson’s Garden (Stackpole Books, Mechanicsville, Pennsylvania, 2004. $15.37), Peter Loewer highlights some of the ornamental plants Jefferson was known to have grown or probably encountered on his Virginia estate, creating an informative and very readable book that will especially appeal to gardeners interested in history.

The bulk of the book is compromised of 60 plant profiles, each a little descriptive gem full of history and folklore. Among the featured plants are ones you’d expect, such as hollyhocks and lilacs—and more unusual ones such as Venus flytrap and balsam apple (Momordica balsamina).

Interesting tidbits of information abound in these pages. For instance, seeds were so highly regarded at one time that unscrupulous politicians were known to send them to potential voters to gain favors. Loewer informs us that Jefferson considered poison ivy an ornamental plant, and John Bartram even sold it in his Philadelphia nursery.

These anecdotes and Loewer’s conversational tone make Jefferson’s Garden a great summer read.

Buy This Book

Mary Yee, Managing Editor and Designer

 

 

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