The American Gardener
 
 


American Horticultural Society
The American Gardener
May/June 2005 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 2005 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

MINI REVIEWS

GARDENER’S BOOKS
Regional Gardening Books


BOOK REVIEWS
Recommendations for Your Gardening Library

Gardening with Clematis: Design & Cultivation. Linda Beutler. Timber Press, Portland, Oregon, 2004. 300 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $34.95. Buy This Book

 



 

 

 

 

Simply Clematis: Clematis Made Simple.
Edith M. Malek. American Clematis Society, Irvine, California, 2004. 304 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $24.95.


When I first sat down with these books, I immediately turned to pruning, since this is the one area where clematis writers, growers, and fanciers can come unstuck. I should know, as I have been all three in my time. I had not been at it long—clematis growing that is—and the more I read about clematis and pruning the more confused I became. Eventually, I did figure it out and had my own sizeable collection of clematis, but it would have been nice to have these two books to help me along the way.

Linda Beutler, the author of Gardening with Clematis: Design & Cultivation, is a floral designer, garden designer, and “unabashed clematis obsessive,” cultivating 250 plus clematis taxa in her Portland, Oregon, garden. In the course of discussing the subject of her book’s title, Beutler describes the various sorts of clematis, from herbaceous perennials to large-flowered climbers. She also introduces some of Portland’s better known gardenistas and gurus, which is helpful since a good way to learn about gardening is from other’s successes—and mistakes.

Beutler’s ability to conjure word images of clematis colors and forms growing with all sorts of other plants is impressive, though it helps to know your crocosmias from your cryptomerias. More than 100 attractive color photographs further illustrate the text. And there are abundant ideas for ways to use clematis throughout the garden, from strict tuteurs to free-form rebar supports, grocery carts (a rather Portlandian conceit, I think) to simple arbors. Beutler’s design message is “be inventive.” Her cultural message is “be patient”—a sentiment she shares with Edith M. Malek, author of Simply Clematis: Clematis Made Simple.

Malek is president and founder of the American Clematis Society, the first clematis society in the United States. She gardens with 200 plus clematis in Irvine, California—a very different climate from Beutler’s Pacific Northwest garden. It was interesting to note the variances in approach between the two pros, but was evidence, too, of clematis’s accommodating nature; there are clematis for every condition it would seem, but only if various cultural guidelines are adhered to.
In a direct and authoritative manner, Malek cuts straight to the chase with brisk, hard-working, how-to-grow information, presented without hyperbole. Beutler’s work has the how-to as well, just not quite so readily accessible. Then, as the title proclaims, the remaining pages of Malek’s book are filled simply with clematis. Portraits of some 120 different clematis are accompanied by information such as the history, zones, bloom period, height, light requirements, and pruning regime. All of this makes Malek’s guide a good companion to Beutler’s design-oriented text and is why, if you are going to pursue clematis with any energy, you need both these books.

Ethne Clarke

Garden Editor of Traditional Home magazine, a publication of the Meredith Corporation.

 

 

The Perennial Gardener’s Design Primer: The Essential Guide to Creating Simply Sensational Gardens. Stephanie Cohen and Nancy J. Ondra. Photographs by Rob Cardillo. Storey Publishing, North Adams, Massachusetts, 2005. 320 pages. Publisher’s price, hardcover: $34.95. Buy This Book

Is it true, as the title implies, that this book will make you a perennial gardening expert? It’s hard to believe otherwise, as the authors have managed to pack so much in here. This book pools the wisdom of two very experienced gardeners: Stephanie Cohen is a teacher of perennial design at Temple University in Pennsylvania and Nancy J. Ondra is the author of several other gardening books and a former nursery owner.

Organized into three sections, the book begins appropriately with a chapter titled, “Getting Started,” which discusses the “basics of getting any design off to a great start.” This is followed by several chapters that cover important design elements such as color and texture, how to combine perennials with other plants such as annuals, bulbs, and shrubs, and designing with non-plant essentials such as paths, lighting, and fences.

The second section deals with challenging conditions like wet soils and shade, creative color combinations and themes (including the joys of white), and perennials for four seasons. Cottage gardens, naturalistic styles, and other themed plantings are also considered. The final section is especially intriguing for its before-and-after discourse on gardens the authors have tackled personally. The book concludes with an illustrated chart summarizing such plant details as light needs, season of bloom, and color for a quick reference.

As a list-maker myself, I especially loved the plant lists throughout the book. These highlight various plants for specific needs such as “Marvelous Moisture Lovers for Sun” and “Orange You Glad?” covering hot-colored blooms.

I also got a real kick out of the recurring sidebars, titled “Stephanie Says” and “Nan’s Notebook,” that offer the authors’ personal observations and tips. Cohen is clearly a character, and I laughed out loud at her wacky observations on everything from foundation plantings with “green meatballs” to difficult sites with “plants on life-support systems.” Ondra’s comments are equally informative—for example, her warning about “black holes,” referring to dark-leaved plants that are poorly sited among bright ones.

The authors’ user-friendly—and sometimes hysterically funny—writing makes it easy to read, Rob Cardillo’s beautiful photographs make the plants easy to recognize, and color drawings of design plans make it easy to visualize the resulting garden. All you’ll need then is a set of dirty fingernails.

Linda Yang

Linda Yang, a “retired” journalist for the New York Times and author of four books, including The City Gardener’s Handbook, now writes primarily for Better Homes & Gardens.



 

MINI REVIEWS

Take a walk down a typical city street and you might notice the absence of green. In Garden Your City (Taylor Trade Publishing, 2005, $24.95),
Buy This Book Manhattan gardener Barbara Hobens Feldt asserts that urbanites don’t have to succumb to concrete and asphalt. To reap the rich rewards of gardening in a city, “finding a space and expanding your horticultural horizons is the key,” she writes. Feldt begins with gardening basics, then shares her experiences and advice on how to meet the challenges of city gardening—such as getting water to a rooftop. Urban gardeners everywhere will benefit from this insightful book.

Nicole Gibson, Editorial Intern




 

As roses begin their colorful and fragrant summertime show, A Bouquet of Roses: Glorious Arrangements for All Occasions by Christina Wressell (Chronicle Books, 2005, $19.95) Buy This Book offers 30 creative ideas for bringing the show indoors. Organized by color, each arrangement includes a list of flowers to use, container suggestions, design techniques, and a color photograph that shows off the whole piece. Wressell also provides advice for selecting and preparing cut roses, and a list of her favorite cultivars by color.

Viveka Neveln, Assistant Editor


 


GARDENER’S BOOKS
Regional Gardening Books

Gardening is an activity Americans enjoy nationwide, but recommendations for successful practices and plant selection can vary quite a bit from region to region. The diverse climates and ecosystems of this country’s coasts, prairies, mountains, and deserts offer myriad challenges and possibilities. Here are some recently published books that offer region-specific plant and gardening advice.

UP NORTH

Gardeners everywhere are becoming increasingly aware of and interested in indigenous flora. Native Plants of the Northeast by Donald J. Leopold (Timber Press, 2005, $39.95) Buy This Book provides an invaluable resource for using natives in the landscape and restoration projects. The book describes ferns, grasses, wild flowers, vines, shrubs, and trees that are native to northeastern North America, including eastern Canada and the eastern United States as far as the Plains states. Hundreds of color photographs accompany the text, and an appendix provides plant lists for various purposes such as plants for wet soil and plants that attract wildlife.

 

 


For those on the other side of the country, there’s The Big Book of Northwest Perennials by Marty Wingate (Sasquatch Books, 2005, $24.95).  Buy This Book The Pacific Northwest’s “accommodating growing environment can make choosing perennials seem like an overwhelming task,” writes Wingate. This book aims to help by providing succinct descriptions and color photographs of more than 150 perennials that thrive in northwestern gardens. It includes chapters on how to design and maintain perennial gardens as well as a list of local plant societies and public gardens as sources of further information.



 

MIDDLE GROUND

For gardeners from Delaware south to Virginia, Month-by-Month Gardening in the Mid-Atlantic by André and Mark Viette with Jacqueline Heriteau (Cool Springs Press, 2004, $19.99) Buy This Book covers when to do what during the gardening year. Chapters are divided by major plant categories such as annuals, perennials, houseplants, lawns, roses, and water plants. Each chapter covers when gardening activities such as planting, pruning, watering, and fertilizing should be done and includes a chart of recommended plants for the region.

 

 

Another title in the Cool Springs Press series in 2004 is Month-by-Month Gardening in the Prairie Lands by Cathy Wilkinson Barash and Melinda Myers.  Buy This Book It follows the same easy-to-use format but focuses on gardening in Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and the Dakotas.

 



 

 

DOWN SOUTH

High salt levels, poor soil, and tempestuous weather make gardening in coastal areas challenging. Using plants that adapt well to seaside life is a key to success. Landscape Plants for the Gulf and South Atlantic Coasts by Robert J. Black and Edward F. Gilman (University Press of Florida, 2004, $24.95) Buy This Book covers how to select and grow plants for coastal regions, and describes more than 400 trees, shrubs, vines, and ground covers—each one accompanied by a color photograph.

Viveka Neveln, Assistant Editor





More Regional Gardening Books

Gardens and Historic Plants of the Antebellum South. James R. Cothran. University of South Carolina Press, 2003, $49.95. Buy This Book



 

 

 

 

In Search of Great Plants: The Insider’s Guide to the Best Plants in the Midwest. Betty Earl. Cool Springs Press, 2004, $19.99. Buy This Book



 

 

 

 

 

Landscaping with Native Plants of Minnesota. Lynn M. Steiner. Voyageur Press, 2005, $24.95. Buy This Book



 

 

 

 

Ornamental Grasses for the Southeast. Peter Loewer. Cool Springs Press, 2004, $22.99.  Buy This Book



 

 

 

 

 

Perennial Gardening in Texas. Alan Franz. Taylor Trade Publishing, 2005, $39.95. Buy This Book

 

 

 

 

Wildly Successful Plants: Northern California. Pam Pierce. Sasquatch Books, 2004, $24.95. Buy This Book



 

 

 

 

 

Wild Lilies, Irises, and Grasses: Gardening with California Monocots. Nora Harlow and Kristin Jakob, editors. University of California Press, 2004, $24.95. Buy This Book



 

 

 

 

The Zen of Gardening in the High and Arid West. David Wann. Fulcrum Publishing, 2003, $17.95. 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