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LANDSCAPE BOOKS
Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Marta Iris Montero. By University of California Press.
There are some available for $114.99.
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1 comments about Roberto Burle Marx: The Lyrical Landscape.
- This is a beauteful book about the life and work of this very important Landscape Architect. I am pleased to have it in my Collection.
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Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Melvin Kalfus. By NYU Press.
The regular list price is $20.50.
Sells new for $20.24.
There are some available for $9.75.
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No comments about Frederick Law Olmstead: The Passion of a Public Artist (American Social Experience).
Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Christopher For Mcdowell and Tricia Clark-mcdowell. By Fireside.
The regular list price is $15.00.
Sells new for $9.95.
There are some available for $2.75.
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5 comments about The Sanctuary Garden: Creating a Place of Refuge in Your Yard or Garden.
- Almost a "garden as metaphor," book, you won't find concrete advide about how to plant, or what to do about pests, etc. You will find an inspired pathway to spirit via the garden. The authors write with a clear, poetic voice about earth, wind, water and sunlight as manifestations of the soul. As an avid gardener, this is one of my all time favorites! It would make a terrific gift for anyone interested in the natural/spiritual worlds.
- This is a wonderful book! It is very inspiring, and the ideas are easy to follow, understand, and adapt to your own space and needs. I loved the descriptions of their garden/sanctuary at their home, and am inspired to try to create some sacred space in my own life. Thank you for a truly fantastic book!
- I LOVE this book. It's about so MUCH more than just digging in the dirt! I especially love the watercolor illustrations. We have always called our own backyard a sanctuary. Now, we are incorporating some of the bountiful ideas found in this cornucopia of garden delights.
- I bought this book from a different web retailer because of the online description; I did not see it in the store first. If I had, I wouldn't have bought it, because it is a philosophy book about gardening. I tend to buy gardening books that have lots of photos or diagrams of examples. This book has no photos and only a few drawings. It is all text. If you are a "show me" kind of person like I am, then don't buy this book.
- While this book may not have glossy photos, it is none-the-less a dreamer's guide to gardening and solved my biggest garden problem: how to make visitors stop and abide awhile in my garden.
On home garden tours, I often watch people fall prey to a mindset of "strolling on a mission" as they move from one composed vista to the next, mentally recording pretty combinations or successful "scenes." I was saddened recently to see a beautiful pergola draped in exotic jade vine (Strongylodon macrobotrys) with people flocking to see the flowers, but not one person felt genuinely invited to sit inside. In my mind, a garden fails if it does not: A.) stop you in your tracks and B.) invite you to sit awhile, quietly and comfortably.
One of my goals is to open my garden to such a home tour and discover people lingering, feeling transcendently at peace and at home. This book helped me find a way to transform the garden experience from people saying "pretty" to people having conversations in outdoor salons.
I share the other reviewer's experience. I am a visual person and gravitate towards books with landscape plans and photos. I have a library shelf full of garden design books; Feng Shui, modern, Balinese, etc. and binders of ideas from magazine clippings. Yet this book did more to shape the garden experience I want visitors to have than any other.
Each garden "room" should function the same way as the vibrant passages the authors use to open each section in the book: creating layers of engagement that invite you to reflect.
I found myself evaluating designs with more than just an eye for cleverness or cohesiveness. This book is an invitation to center yourself before setting out to create a peaceful space outdoors.
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Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Xin Wu. By Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection.
The regular list price is $45.00.
Sells new for $32.63.
There are some available for $27.40.
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No comments about Patricia Johanson's <i>House and Garden</i> Commission: Re-construction of Modernity (Dumbarton Oaks Other Titles in Garden History).
Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Barbara Ellis. By Houghton Mifflin.
The regular list price is $12.95.
Sells new for $19.89.
There are some available for $5.20.
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1 comments about Taylor's Weekend Gardening Guide to Easy Practical Pruning: Techniques For Training Trees, Shrubs, Vines, and Roses (Taylor's Weekend Gardening Guides).
- I recently moved into a house with a yard and a variety of trees, vines, and Roses. I have read large gardening references before in attempts to prune planter box trees and gardens, but never walked away with the sense that I could actually prune and train my plants successfully. This book began with definitions of terminology, tool selection, and provided clear text and multiple helpful drawings and pictures all geared towards the intelligent adult. It addreses the unique properties of the various fruit trees, rose bushes, vines, and shrubs, and gives advice as to when to hire and how to choose an arborist. It helped me understand the impact of pruning and has made me a more educated 'tree' observer.
I cannot see myself ever needing to buy another pruning book! I would highly recommend this for complete and straight forward pruning guide.
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Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Sara B. Stein. By Houghton Mifflin.
The regular list price is $35.00.
Sells new for $24.99.
There are some available for $16.99.
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5 comments about Planting Noah's Garden: Further Adventures in Backyard Ecology.
- This book is totally enchanting. When I first read "David Copperfield" I told myself that I would read it again in a few years and it would read differently. And it has."Planting Noah's Garden" has exactly the same feel. I have spent the last six months recommending this book to my naturalist friends. I have often though of passing my copy on, but have decided not to. I buy another copy instead. I have the feeling that this is a book that I will want to read again.and again.Sara states that "Children are part of the mega-fauna of every landscape." She writes about the basic need of children to look under rocks and logs, to climb trees..to discover the natural wonders that await them there. And, or course, she tells us how to make this happen.
If you enjoy planting things, if you enjoy your yard, your children and your grandchildren, buy this book. It is a masterpiece.
- I cannot encourage anyone who is even slightly interested in wildlife or butterfly gardening strongly enough - READ THIS BOOK! Along with Noah's Garden, Stein's first "eco-gardening" book, this is a great read for anyone who finds endless lawns boring, or has driven past a wooded lot daily, only to wake up one day and find it has been flattened to make a strip mall. I have read both books several times and used the advice in both to build an beautiful butterfly and bird garden (on a patio outside an apartment, no less) and I can't wait to apply it to a full-sized yard. This book doesn't just encourage you to make a difference - even if it's just a dent - it actually shows you how. I loved it, and I plan to give it as gifts in the future.
- Stein's way with words allows her to provide a huge amount of information in entertaining narrative form to the degree that one just can't put the book down. This is the appeal and value of her "Noah's Garden" and continues in Part 1 of "Planting Noah's Garden." Part 2 is something extra: direct instructions, charts, and everything a reader wants to know about how to follow in Stein's footsteps (or spade holes). She provides a wealth of information on everything from how to get started with the complex process of eco-gardening to precise information on specific plants and projects. This is really Stein's answer to the hundreds of letters and questions she has gotten since "Noah's Garden" and what an answer it is!
- I bought this book because I have two children and one of the other reviewers spoke about how the author views children as part of the "mega fauna" of a landscape and gives her suggestions on how to make an interesting outdoor "habitat" for them, so to speak. In addition, I've always tried to take an ecologically sound approach to landscaping in my yard by gardening organically.
Truth to tell, I never really thought about whether or not it's ecologically sound to plant mostly exotic plants in my yard versus native ones. I congratulated myself that I let a meadow emerge in my back yard when I moved in. I never gave much thought to exactly what was growing in it. I've always believed that it is just plain wrong to collect plants from the wild...but are there times when it is not only justified but perhaps actually beneficial? If so, when? In any case, the book definitely stretched my perceptions and gave me a whole lot to think about in terms of my own typical, "newly developed" suburban lot. I felt like the chapter about the author's niece, also about such a suburban lot, could have been about my own. I recommend this book to anyone interested in gardening or ecology...and even those not currently interested could probably benefit! Worth every penny I paid...not just an enjoyable read, but a very informative one.
- this is the much-needed follow-up to Noah's Garden. where that book was a statement of a philosophy of garden-tending, this one is a planting manual. making use of what i could on 3/8ths of an acre, i harvested a bumper crop of birds and butterflies, hawks and owls and toads. to make a retreat from the world in a very small space, this is your design manual.
Lynn Hoffman, author of The New Short Course in Wine
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Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by G. F. Dutton. By Timber Press, Incorporated.
There are some available for $10.82.
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No comments about Some Branch Against the Sky: The Practice and Principles of Marginal Gardening.
Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by John Beardsley and Caroline Constant and Galen Cranz and Paul Groth and John Dixon Hunt and John Jackson and Geoffrey Jellicoe and Stephen Krog and Leo Marx and Marc Treib and Kenneth Frampton. By The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
There are some available for $8.32.
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No comments about Denatured Visions.
Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Blanche M. G. Linden. By University of Massachusetts Press.
The regular list price is $39.95.
Sells new for $32.54.
There are some available for $47.52.
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1 comments about Silent City on a Hill: Picturesque Landscapes of Memory And Boston's Mount Auburn Cemetery.
- Thousands of visitors annually visit America's first and best example of a rural cemetery. Mount Auburn Cemetery was consecrated in 1831. It came about as a practical, down-to-earth (no pun intended) solution to a pressing problem. Boston simply had no more room left in which to bury its dead citizens. A group of business men decided it was a good idea to develop a new burial ground well outside the city limits, but close enough for people to easily visit and pray for their departed family members. It was also suggested that the new burial ground should be a pleasant place to visit and where the living could be assured that the departed were residing in a pleasant and peaceful environment. It was decided to enlist the Horticultural Society to help achieve this new concept in rural burial grounds. Since Mount Auburn was the first such cemetery in the United States it was a forerunner of not only rural burying grounds but many landscaped, public parks within city limits. Central Park in New York City was one such result of this new beautiful park concept.
If one doesn't have the patience or interest in reading the rather dry 1861 annual report-like "History of Mount Auburn Cemetery" by Jacob Bigelow, the President of the Corporation and one of the founders of that National Landmark, this is the award-winning coffee table book for you. It's lavishly illustrated with colorful prints as well as photographs and is meticulously researched and well written. More importantly, it's interesting to read. The history of Mount Auburn is fascinating and for those who have actually visited the peaceful location, it will refresh many of their personal memories. In the 19th Century more visitors came to see Mount Auburn than went to see Niagara Falls. It was, and still is, world famous as a "City of the Dead."
The reader won't be disappointed with this volume. It's a publishing gem.
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Posted in Landscape (Friday, October 10, 2008)
Written by Barbara C. Colley. By McGraw-Hill Professional.
The regular list price is $89.95.
Sells new for $68.61.
There are some available for $37.48.
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3 comments about Practical Manual of Land Development.
- The author makes a poor effort to even proof read her work. Several of the examples of design are filled with mathematical errors that someone with a professional license should not be making. With most of the professionals in the field of land development using English units, the author's insistent use of metric makes her work difficult to examine and even less useful as a design guide.
- I got this book just one month ago. This book is very good for the introduction of Land Development. As for the units, I think that some engineers don't like S-I Units (especially the engineers in the east coast). But in the future, all the people around the world will use it.
Anyway, we can use this book for the introduction material. There are a lot of regulations and codes waiting for us to read.
- I haven't read the book, but as a production manager for a publishing company for a number of years, I can only say that it is not the author's responsibility or fault that there were errors. It is the copyeditor's responsibility to make sure that two plus two equal four(even in artwork), and the proofreader's responsibility to make sure there are no misspellings. It's nice if the author can catch them, but they rarely do--that's why we hire copyeditors and proofreaders.
As to metric--don't know. Is the author or the book publisher European? The rest of the world uses metric, although there are some in the U.S. that use metric (CalTrans, for instance). All I can think of is that the editor was pushing a metric book to be the first on the block, or to sell to a bigger European market....
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Roberto Burle Marx: The Lyrical Landscape
Frederick Law Olmstead: The Passion of a Public Artist (American Social Experience)
The Sanctuary Garden: Creating a Place of Refuge in Your Yard or Garden
Patricia Johanson's <i>House and Garden</i> Commission: Re-construction of Modernity (Dumbarton Oaks Other Titles in Garden History)
Taylor's Weekend Gardening Guide to Easy Practical Pruning: Techniques For Training Trees, Shrubs, Vines, and Roses (Taylor's Weekend Gardening Guides)
Planting Noah's Garden: Further Adventures in Backyard Ecology
Some Branch Against the Sky: The Practice and Principles of Marginal Gardening
Denatured Visions
Silent City on a Hill: Picturesque Landscapes of Memory And Boston's Mount Auburn Cemetery
Practical Manual of Land Development
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