Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Sidney Painter. By The Johns Hopkins University Press.
There are some available for $1.85.
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No comments about French Chivalry: Chivalric Ideas and Practices in Medieval France.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Alexandra D'Arnoux and Bruno Laubadere. By Flammarion.
The regular list price is $40.00.
Sells new for $248.94.
There are some available for $113.33.
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2 comments about Terraces and Roof Gardens of Paris.
- This book is so delightful. As a city dweller in Manhattan with a large roof deck of my own, I needed some inspiration for growing plants upwards on several trellises I installed. This book was perfect! The designs a gorgeous, and the writer gives you enough information to duplicate some of the marvels. Also, if you love Paris as I do, you'll love daydreaming over the photographs.
- Yes, I have a deck built over my garage roof which is accessible from my kitchen/fam. rm. So, I was looking for inspiration on what plants to have there this summer when I happened upon this very attractive book about terrace & rooftop gardens just yesterday at my local bkstore! I am getting lots of ideas from the pics on color combinations, styles and accents. The photos are detailed & altho I haven't read the text yet, it appears to have lots of quotes from the owners perspective on why they chose their plants. The author embellishes this with clear descriptions as well. Photo descriptions usually name the plants shown & I've seen 2 or 3 already of interest that are new to me that I can look up in a gardening guide & perhaps incorporate into my own roof top garden. Ea. section of the book shows several examples of private terrace gardens; i.e. A section on "Open-air dining" showing several terraces planted around tables & chairs for delightful outdoor meals. Another sec. called "Hanging gardens" using bamboo & cascading plants in unusual planting combinations. A thoroughly delightful feast for the eyes; and, one would never guess that all these various styles are within one large city and thusly all in the same approx. climate. I will be devouring this book this spring and enjoying it for many years to come!
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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Tatsuo Ishimoto and Kiyoko Ishimoto. By Crown Publishers.
There are some available for $2.24.
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No comments about Japanese gardens today;: How the Japanese use rocks, water, plants,.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Ogden Tanner. By Harry N Abrams.
Sells new for $19.95.
There are some available for $2.79.
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No comments about Gardens of the Hudson River Valley: An Illustrated Guide.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Amy Elizabeth Cook. By Time-Life Books.
The regular list price is $16.95.
Sells new for $0.95.
There are some available for $0.94.
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1 comments about Outdoor Style (Backyard Living).
- I am lucky to have such a strong imagination. But sometimes imagination doesn't cut it, especially when you don't know what the heck you're doing. Enter Outdoor Style. This book gave substance to my kooky gardening fantasies by giving me a clue of how I might carry those fantasies out. It said, "You want a trellis? Fine, make a trellis. Here's how." Previously, I would have fumbled to sculpt a tower of wire, eventually become disgruntled, and cracked open a beer to numb my resultant scrapes and scratches.
Outdoor Style reminded me of all the frou-frou and tra-la that I could add to my garden, plus motivated me to maintain the living, breathing elements (My jasmine climbs with new fervor!!!). I wouldn't say your garden will wither away without this book. Still, it sure is nice to feel both a little inspired AND a little competent., and this book helps. PLUS: the all important ambient photos run rampant through these pages. I am such a sucker for ambiance.....
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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Michio Fujioka. By Kodansha International (JPN).
There are some available for $7.02.
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1 comments about Japanese Residences and Gardens: A Tradition of Integration.
- I bought the book because I intend to build a japanese style house.This book is useless in residence design.The title is wrong!The book is about famous royal palaces and sorroundings.It contains exactly nineteen beautiful color pictures, showing some general views of six imperial palaces and gardens. Short descriptions and historical details are presented with a score of black and white pictures and some sketcks.
It is difficult to believe that this ordinary book was written by the former leading authority in premodern Japanese architecture. I recommend "Form & Space in Japanese Architecture" by Norman Carver Jr, who really understood and captured the the japanese spirit.
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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
By Wiley.
The regular list price is $75.00.
Sells new for $47.72.
There are some available for $48.00.
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No comments about Golf Greens and Green-Keeping.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Edward C. Martin. By Avi Pub Co.
There are some available for $2.80.
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No comments about Landscape Plants in Design: A Photographic Guide.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Ali Akbar Husain. By Oxford University Press, USA.
The regular list price is $37.50.
Sells new for $175.25.
There are some available for $140.00.
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No comments about Scent in the Islamic Garden: A Study of Deccani Urdu Literary Sources.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, August 20, 2008)
Written by Mark Francis and Andreas Reimann. By University of California Press.
The regular list price is $34.95.
Sells new for $39.94.
There are some available for $8.18.
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3 comments about The California Landscape Garden: Ecology, Culture, and Design.
- This book manages to be both inspirational and incredibly informative at the same time. The book integrates principles of native landscaping, sustainable design, habitat restoration, and traditional garden design. It also provides rich details about many of California's plant communities and wildlife species.
While the authors strongly advocate for sustainable practices, I found the book refreshingly non-dogmatic. For example, they say it's fine to incorporate non-native species into your garden; they even recognize the value of lawns.
I only wish the book had more and larger photos. As I read about all the amazing plants and landscapes the authors discussed, it would have been nice to see what they were writing about.
- Francis and Reimann have covered all bases of native landscaping in this fine statement of integral composition. A sensitive awareness of local and regional native flora/fauna
should govern choices of construction materials to plant selection for a harmonic flow and consistency between the untouched native environs to the project site for a "....sense
of connection with the larger harmonies of the biosphere..." (Page 36, quoted from William Carney).
The book includes lists of regional native flora and fauna- birds, animals, insects, amphibians, etc. and many resources for further information- books, native landscape architects, plant nurseries, and many illustrations including demonstration gardens.
This book is a must for all those interested in incorporating native plants into their landscape, especially architects, builders and landscape designers who want to learn about beautiful and environmentally beneficial native plants.
- I was both delighted and disturbed while reading The California Landscape Garden, by Mark Francis and Andreas Reinmann. The idea that there should be a distinctive "California Garden" has always inspired the gardener to great heights of creativity. There are those who, I am sure, claim to have developed this garden. However, the authors are correct in their observation that "A huge and increasingly pluralistic middle class has put its own stamp on the vernacular landscape, opting for a plethora of individualized styles in hours and garden. Far from displaying the conformity of , say, a Cape Cod community with its distinctive architectural look, today California's developed environment is marked by an often runaway eclecticism. Such a lack of a style has in fact become the style in and of itself. " page 23 The California garden may always be driven by this diversity. I was a bit disturbed by the heavy politically correct tone of the book. I guess it is necessary to display where they are coming from. But it does turn this book from being a useful manual on creating this new type of California garden into a book that is more opposed to the garden dominator style that they feel is predominant. I am a gardener who is open to learn and don't have to oppose something to accept a better idea. My own prejudices aside, (i.e.I believe that God has created Nature rather than nature creating a myth, and I do not feel that we are running out of wild places in this land) I enjoyed the ideas of this book. I have been increasingly amazed at how much God's gardens can teach us. As I drive through the Santa Cruz Mountains on my way to defile the beach with the Human Footprint, I can't help but marvel at the beauty of the tall healthy trees, the rich green undergrowth , the use of ferns on steep, wet slopes etc... There are no sprinkler systems, pest control applications, statues nor other useful garden features, and yet even with the decaying tree trunks, the leaning trees, the unpruned dead branches...there is more beauty than I could ever hope to approach in my contrived gardens. This book give some good ideas as to how you can incorporate God's natural techniques in our gardens. There are many good examples of how some of the new breed of California architect have made environmentally sound gardens that are almost like paintings. I still feel, however, that no matter how much we succeed in our attempts to imitate natural gardens, we are still creating artificial landscapes. We are still the same as one who plants a lawn, some foundation shrubs and a rosebush for color, we are just doing it differently. So, if you get past the political correctness, the reverence for anything the indigenous peoples did, the scare tactics and the snootiness, there is much to be learned from the book. It has affected the way I garden, and I think that that is what they set out to do. Philosophical johnbas@garlic.com
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