The American Gardener
 
 


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

Tomes About Trees



BOOK REVIEWS
Recommendations for Your Gardening Library


Native Trees for North American Landscapes(From the Atlantic to the Rockies). Guy Sternberg with Jim Wilson, Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2004. 575 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $41.97. Buy This Book

Among my collection of garden books, a few look sadly bedraggled, with bindings falling apart, or spine type worn off. Sometimes I fault poor production. But in the case of the original version of this book, Landscaping with Native Trees, published as a paperback in 1995, I have to blame my own passionate affection. It’s puffy from rain, stained from coffee, battered from various strange things being used as bookmarks, because I lug it out to the garden, off to the weekend house, and onto the trail. As a guide to our native trees, it was both paean and practical, so I was surprised to hear it had gone out of print—and jubilant to hear that Timber Press was going to reproduce it.

“Reproduce,” it turns out, was a major misunderstanding. The book has doubled in size, by virtue of including more species, more detailed descriptions, and more photographs. Sternberg has updated information on cultivars, including tips on why you don’t necessarily need to spend that money (sure, you can buy a “cottonless” cottonwood, but you can also simply propagate a male specimen) and national champion trees. (That was a major focus of the previous book that is a bit neglected here.)

The range of photos—single specimen profiles, close-ups of nuts, leaves, flowers, and bark, and an occasional grove of trees or leafless branches in a woodland or on a snow-swept plains—is magnificent. The previous version of the book had way too many pictures of the coauthors—much as I like and respect them—posed beside their subjects. Although the champion trees needed this for perspective, Timber’s answer was to start each entry with a silhouette drawing of the tree indicating shape and relative size. There’s a selection guide for special environmental situations.

The result may be somewhat less down-home friendly than my beat-up old pal, but it achieves a fine mix of academic information and poetic appreciation that could make it a classic. Now I just have to figure out how to lug around something twice as big.

—Kathleen Fisher

A resident of Alexandria, Virginia, Kathleen Fisher is author, most recently, of Taylor’s Guide to Shrubs, published by Houghton-Mifflin.

 

Roses: A Celebration, Thirty-three Eminent Gardeners on their Favorite Rose.
Edited by Wayne Winterrowd. Original paintings by Pamela Stagg. North Point Press, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 2003. 256 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $21. Buy This Book

Roses: A Celebration is a collection of 33 essays written by some of the finest garden writers and rosarians of the 20th century, including Graham Stuart Thomas, David Austin, Lauren Springer, Dan Hinkley, and Ken Druse, among others. Each writer discusses his or her favorite rose, but the book is much more than a tribute to a selection of hybrids and species.

Many of the essayists use the subject of roses as a springboard to communicate a life truth or an insight into human relationships. Jamaica Kincaid writes, “I take it as a given that all things worth loving are difficult, hard to pin down, and changeable, all the while being true to themselves. The ‘Alchymist’ can do whatever it wants, but it remains a rose, the rose that I love.”

Many of the writers hold strong opinions, and they are not shy about expressing them. Therein lies much of the entertainment. Henry Mitchell, who wrote a much-loved garden column for the Washington Post newspaper for more than 20 years, had an antipathy towards hybrid tea roses. Of ‘Chrysler Imperial’ Mitchell wrote, “when it blooms I always feel that I have witnessed an upheaval rather than a flowering.” He was equally disparaging about the rose ‘Peace’, which he said, “has huge flowers that should please anyone who has always longed to grow the largest turnip in the world.”

Each essay in the book is prefaced by an original color painting by Pamela Stagg of the rose in the spotlight.

This is a book you can dip into at random when you have a spare five or 10 minutes to read one essay. But beware: The book is addictive. It is easy to become so immersed that an hour or two later you find yourself still reading, and saying, “I’ll read just one more essay, and then I’ll stop.” But you can’t. And that’s all right. Give in to the pleasure and enjoy the book.

—Catriona Tudor Erler

Catriona Tudor Erler’s most recent 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

Tomes About Trees


Trees are the backbone of a landscape. They line our avenues, shade our gardens, frame our houses, and provide homes for wildlife. The right tree adds charm and value to the landscape; alternatively, the loss of a tree can be devastating. For help in selecting, caring, and appreciating our woody sentinels, we recommend these recently published books.

Selecting the best tree for your yard requires a bit of research, and two recently published books are here to help. Trees for the Yard and Garden by John Cushnie (Tafalgar Square Publishing, 2003) offers recommendations and descriptions of the best trees for special purposes, including those adaptable to clay soil, alkaline soil, sunny dry sites, for growing against walls, in small gardens etc. The chapter “Trees Grow on You” addresses care and culture, from planting and pruning to propagation. Buy This Book.

 

Best Trees for Your Garden by Allen Paterson (Firefly Books, Ltd., 2003) begins by providing a sympathetic perspective of “how trees as living organisms arrange their lives,” and what trees mean to us and our landscapes. Paterson also offers advice on choosing the right tree for the constraints of your site. Both books include directories of broad leaf trees and conifers, consisting of encyclopedic entries that provide valuable insight into the landscape attributes of each. Buy This Book.

 

 

For beautiful hand painted illustrations of over 1,000 species and varieties commonly cultivated in Europe—many of which are also grown in the United States—look for The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Trees by John White, illustrated by David More (Timber Press, 2002). Each double-page spread contains descriptions and detailed illustrations of leaves or needles, bark, flowers, fruit, etc. Buy This Book.

 

 

 

If you need some maintenance advice for your trees, The Tree Doctor: A Guide to Tree Care and Maintenance (Firefly Books, 2003) by Daniel and Erin Prendergast is a good place to start. In addition to tips on selecting the right tree for your property, this book addresses placement of trees within the landscape, planting basics, as well as after-planting care: watering, staking, trunk protection, fertilizing, and mulching. Separate chapters are devoted to pruning, diagnosing problems, protecting trees from damage, and how to determine when it’s time to call in an arborist. Buy This Book.

 

The American elm (Ulmus americana) has been a significant part of our country’s landscape since its beginning, lining avenues first in the earliest towns and cities of New England, and then, because it proved so adaptable, throughout the United States. Republic of Shade: New England and the American Elm by Thomas Campanella (Yale University Press, 2003) is the story of this elegant and highly venerated tree. Campenella discusses how the elm became a symbol of the early environmental movement of the 19th century, and he relates the devastation of this species by Dutch elm disease in the 20th century. Illustrated with historic photographs and prints, this book traces the story of the elm through the history of this country and presents hope for its survival through research aimed at the development of varieties that resist Dutch elm disease. Buy This Book.

 

Covering 20 North American tree groups, Arboretum America: A Philosophy of the Forest by Diana Beresford-Kroeger (The University of Michigan Press, 2003) is a melding of philosophy, history, ecology, and practical garden advice. Beresford-Kroeger discusses trees in terms of their historic medicinal uses, their culture, their contribution to both human well-being and the health of the natural environment, and their use in our landscapes. She includes tips on seasonal interest, organic care, placement, and complementary plantings. Buy This Book.

 

 

A variety of stories about trees is included in Tree Stories: A Collection of Extraordinary Encounters edited by Warren David Jacobs and Karen I. Shragg (SunShine Press Publications, 2002). This is a collection of stories and poems written by tree lovers of all ages that testifies to the many ways that trees can enrich and add meaning to our lives from childhood to adulthood. The book is divided into chapters that include: “Trees as Teachers,” “Trees of Childhood,” “Trees as Companions,” and more. Buy This Book.

 

 

 

Aptly wrapping up our survey of arboreal book selections is Tree Bark: A Color Guide by Hugues Vaucher (Timber Press, 2003). A beautifully illustrated volume, it was originally published in French and German in the 1990s. This translated revision has been expanded to include over 440 species and varieties from all over the world that are guaranteed to have you appreciating tree bark not only for its ornamental value, but also its diverse characteristics, function as part of the tree, and uses in art and industry. Buy This Book.

 

 

 

Home
Become a 
Member
What's New? 
Awards
Books
Events
Gardening
Q and A
How Can I Give?
Internet Community 
Resources and
Links
Master Gardeners
Members Only
Membership
Organization Information
Press Room
Publications
River Farm
Youth Gardening