Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Elizabeth Lawrence. By The University of North Carolina Press.
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $17.96.
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1 comments about Through the Garden Gate.
- Miss Lawrence says, "Dill is a hardy annual. The seeds can be sown in fall or early spring. The seedlings must be thinned, and Mrs. Clarkson says she saves every scrap that is pulled up. She uses them in potato salad, and sprinkles them over broiled lamb."
Miss Lawrence has distilled much of her gardening and some of her cooking knowledge into this lovely little book (about 250 pages). Ideas abound from sources such as old wives tales, myths, stories, poetry, and the miscellaneous information passed along to Miss Lawrence from her correspondents, friends, and readers. Reading this text is like sitting at a wise woman's knee and listening to her tell about past times. Will it rain on Saint Swithin's Day (July 15th) as it did in 971 A.D when his body was transferred from a forgotten grave to the Cathedral for a proper burial? Were the Chinese, who considered the frog the lord of waters onto something, "Send soon O frog the jewel of water." But my favorite writing is the poetry she intersperses into the text -- "A bank where the wild thyme blows, Where Oxlips and the nodding Violet grows, Quite over canopied with lucious woodbine, with sweet musk-roses and with eglantine." Planted any eglantine lately..?
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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Richard Key. By Dorling Kindersley Publishing.
The regular list price is $8.95.
Sells new for $7.75.
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No comments about American Horticultural Society Practical Guides: Arches & Pergolas.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Horticultural Committee of the Garden Club of America and Nancy Peterson Brewster. By Timber Press, Incorporated.
The regular list price is $59.95.
Sells new for $367.86.
There are some available for $12.95.
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2 comments about Plants That Merit Attention: Trees (Plants That Merit Attention).
- The first thing to strike the eye when taking this book to hand is the full color and the beautiful glossy paper (no expense spared at the printer's!). The second thing to be noticed is the lay-out which is only just short of crummy (looks as if this was farmed out to India or the like). It looks pretty silly to have beautiful color pictures printed on expensive glossy paper and then having to look hard to make out the details. Without extra expense or effort the pictures could have been printed 25 to 50% bigger and this would have made the book twice as valuable. The quality of these pictures varies. There are some really great pictures here while others are ... mediocre.
The text was written by a committee and it looks it. This makes for easy comparison and reference, but for an uninspiring read. This fact distinctly decreases its value as a coffee-table book or as an object for delicious browsing. I am hoping the contents of the text are allright (I only browsed through it, but did spot some errors) The botanical names appear mostly in order (I noticed only a few slips), which is not always so in horticultural books. Still these look a little silly because of the lay-out. Pity. Also the age of the book means that recent name changes have not been incorporated (I assume the reader will compensate for this). I guess this is an OK book, that will look decent on the bookshelf, but that falls well short of what it could be.
- I am very impressed with this unique book of rarely seen trees that will add interest to any garden. The book starts with a glossary of botanical terms with b/w illustrations of the anatomy of leaves, flowers, fruits & conifers.
Information includes botanical name, common name, zone, native habitat & date introduced. There is a general description of size, spread, & shape as well as descriptions of leaves, flowers, & fruit. Culture, including soil quality, ideal sunlight, & disease tolerance, as well as transplanting & propagation advice are included also. Three clear photos include the full-size tree & two others show close-ups of leaves, flowers or trunk. It also gives information on winter appearance & landscaping value. Even gardens where the trees can be seen are listed. I really appreciated this type of information. It is so rarely seen in most reference book. The appendices are extremely helpful they list botanical gardens & nurseries. A source for each species can easily be found. Trees are also listed by characteristics. Some include zone, light requirements, soil conditions, resistance, color of bloom & fragrance.
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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
By The MIT Press.
The regular list price is $35.00.
Sells new for $31.90.
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No comments about The Genius of the Place: The English Landscape Garden, 1620-1820.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
By The Johns Hopkins University Press.
Sells new for $55.00.
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No comments about America's National Park Roads and Parkways: Drawings from the Historic American Engineering Record (The Road and American Culture).
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Nick Christians. By Wiley.
The regular list price is $80.00.
Sells new for $58.73.
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1 comments about Fundamentals of Turfgrass Management.
- This introductory-level book provides the beginner with the basics of turfgrass management. Scientific names are as up-to-date as possible for the turfgrasses as well as pests that invade them. Diagrams / photos of grasses and grass pests could be more extensive, but the cost of the book would likely escalate beyond the nominal price of this volume, which makes it attractive for use as a text in an entry-level turfgrass course.
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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
By Architectural Press.
The regular list price is $50.95.
Sells new for $41.21.
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No comments about Continuous Productive Urban Landscapes: Designing Urban Agriculture for Sustainable Cities.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Anthony Alofsin. By W. W. Norton & Company.
The regular list price is $60.00.
Sells new for $18.99.
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1 comments about The Struggle for Modernism: Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and City Planning at Harvard.
- Modernism in architecture is so closely identified with a handful of hero figures (like Walter Gropius and Mies van der Rohe) that we often forget that the real story behind its development is a complex and contentious one. In this wonderful and much-needed book, Anthony Alofsin deftly illustrates that the arrival of European architects in the U.S. in the 1930s cast a shadow over emerging progressive trends in American architectural design and education. At Harvard in particular, this led to an amnesia that convinced students and professors alike that it was Gropius who brought modern ideas to the Graduate School of Design when he began teaching there in 1937. "The Struggle for Modernism" shows clearly, though, that the kernels of these modern ideas were present in the Harvard design programs from their beginnings in 1900. It was not from the Bauhaus that Harvard developed its interdisciplinary approach to design that insisted on collaboration amongst architects, landscape architects, and city planners. Instead, it was Americans like Herbert Langford Warren, Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., George Harold Edgell, and, most importantly, Joseph Hudnut who over decades created the influential and rigorous design programs. This is a fascinating and most welcome book that sheds much new light on a subject that many have incorrectly assumed was already well-understood. Highly recommended.
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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Peter Bosselmann. By University of California Press.
The regular list price is $55.00.
Sells new for $4.58.
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No comments about Representation of Places: Reality and Realism in City Design.
Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, July 9, 2008)
Written by Robert O'Neil. By Harvard University Press.
The regular list price is $35.00.
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1 comments about Academic Freedom in the Wired World: Political Extremism, Corporate Power, and the University.
- If you are unsure exactly what "academic freedom" means, this book will probably leave you more confused than ever. Even if you are an academic freedom wonk like me, the promised "wired world" revelations really comprise only one of the ten chapters, and, as might be expected with emerging issues, their discussion remains limited, hypothetical, and speculative.
And the book is an unpleasant read.
The text displays more errors than one would expect from a university press, some typographic, others editorial (especially numerous redundancies) and suffers from a writing style that yoyos between proper legalese ("catalytic," "dispositive") and hyperbolic journalese ("surprisingly," "strikingly," "shockingly," and the all purpose "increasingly"). Professor O'Neil deploys the empty "troubling," "troubled," or "deeply troubling" at least 30 times in myriad contexts (he uses "myriad" over a dozen times). If only his editors had applied a healthy dose of Strunk's dicta #13, "Omit needless words" and #12, "Put statements in positive form" as O'Neil dilates on what is "not slow" or "not obscure," and what happens "not infrequently." In O'Neil's journalese, boring "Pennsylvania" becomes "The Keystone State" and dull "California" becomes "The Golden State," locutions more appropriate for Newsweek. How strange it is to read that "[t]he First Amendment expressly protects only freedom of speech and of the press, and the right of the people `peaceably to assemble, and petition the Government for a redress of grievances.'" Certainly Professor O'Neil is aware of the establishment clause ("Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;") since he refers to it elsewhere.
This book is larded with anecdotes, but anecdotes are so . . . anecdotal. Sometimes they are hearsay, other times they are incomplete or even contradictory. And why does Professor O'Neil select the tales he does and remain coy about others? Academic freedom discussions are necessarily anecdotal since they usually involve a legal or administrative response to unique circumstances, but O'Neil tells us the same anecdote two and three times as though we had not just read it in the last chapter. On page 95, he asserts that in a week after 9/11, a professor "shocked his community college class by accusing his Muslim students of `killing five thousand people . . . .'" O'Neil seems to have forgotten that back on page 81 he presented the same story (though with less drama) as "reportedly" and eventually dilutes as "unsubstantiated." On page 262, O'Neil tells the story a third time only now "[the professor] never made the inflammatory statements" at all. However, the professor was placed on leave for being "less than sensitive." Curiously, Professor O'Neil opposes David Horowitz's Academic Bill of Rights for fear that its call for intellectual plurality and diversity will "inhibit the rich dialogue that must take place in the classroom," What rich dialogue is there when teachers can be suspended for being "not fully sensitive?" It is just this kind of selective blindness that has called down the public censure he finds "ominous," yet Professor O'Neil dismisses or ignores the catalytic events that brought these new challenges to academic freedom. He mentions, but never discusses, university speech codes--the lay reader would have no idea what he's referring to; he makes no mention of the Berkeley Academic Senate's revised academic freedom definition which permits professorial advocacy in the classroom regarding controverted issues (such advocacy is enthusiastically endorsed by current AAUP president Cary Nelson). O'Neil refers to the necessary "dialogue" but what students complain about is a liberal and sociological monologue. My own well-documented brush with academic freedom involved a committee's attempt to hijack an entire college curriculum by forcing, for eight years, every faculty member to take a loyalty oath and "develop a knowledge and understanding of race, class, and gender issues" in every course offered by the college (including Calculus, Kafka, and Ornamental Horticulture). O'Neil is silent on these (if I may) "deeply troubling" excesses. He speaks approvingly of Alan Kors's and Harvey Silverglate's splendid The Shadow University, then goes on to dismiss most of what it documents. The curious reader is directed to www.indoctrinateu.com and www.thefire.org and www.noindoctrination.org for copious evidence of what O'Neil doesn't want to talk about.
Even after grudgingly acknowledging the liberal predominance on college faculties (a ratio of 30-1 in some disciplines, notably those which most deal with controversial issues), O'Neil faults NoIndoctrination.org for publishing mostly complaints about liberal professors. What else? Where would students find a conservative professor about whom to complain? Luann Wright's NoIndoctrination.org, in my experience, is an invaluable academic freedom resource as well as the most scrupulously vetted of all the teacher evaluation sites. O'Neil also asserts that most postings on RateMyProfessors.com are negative when the most casual look shows smiley faces outnumbering frowny faces 10-1. So although O'Neil purports to investigate "the wired world," his knowledge of that world seems preliminary and skewed.
Eventually, O'Neil's real agenda is exposed through his own anecdotes. In four separate places, Professor O'Neil relates three different cases in which Fox News's Bill O'Reilly defended academic freedom. Each time, Professor O'Neil expresses his astonishment. O'Neil says O'Reilly defending academic freedom is "truly startling" and elsewhere "striking, given the political creed of the speaker." Why is it "striking" when a conservative defends academic freedom? O'Neil is equally amazed that other conservatives, "Rush Limbaugh, Neal Bortz [sic], Sean Hannity, Alan Combs [sic]" have been "strangely silent on national security issues and have seldom pilloried or scape-goated left-leaning scholars . . . ." Perhaps what's really strange is how little O'Neil seems to know about conservative values (and the spelling of conservatives' names, although Alan Colmes would resist being called a conservative) and how obdurate he is about his own stereotypes.
Professor O'Neil spends a fair amount of time on the case of Holocaust denier Arthur Butz who teaches electrical engineering. O'Neil explains that Butz continues to enjoy his teaching position because he is careful about keeping his personal opinions about the Holocaust out of his electrical engineering classroom. While condemning Butz's personal view, O'Neil sees his case as a moral victory for academic freedom and the necessary tolerance for even abhorrent views in the university's "quest for truth." Not really. Butz's case is not a victory for academic freedom because his opinions are not offered in academia. His case is a victory for academic responsibility which calls for electrical engineering classes to be about . . . electrical engineering, not European history. Or taken another way, it is a victory for the academic freedom of students (a concept Professor O'Neil finds . . . troubling) to receive the course described in the catalog. O'Neil even suggests that if Butz were teaching European history and expressed his denial belief, he would be removed as unfit. So his bottom line is: trust us, the system works. But it doesn't. Academic frauds like Ward Churchill prosper because of a congenial, institutionalized, dominant ideology. His academic sins were indulged, even encouraged, until his "insensitive" remarks made him radioactive. Where was the "quest for truth" in the Larry Summers case? Summers was condemned for heresy just as surely as Galileo. The taxpayer looks at the disconnect between high-minded sanctimony and actual practice and asks, "What the hell am I paying for?" And with good reason. The model for education today is not to train the intellect or educate the sensibilities but to shape social and political attitudes, an activity conducted by college professors behind the veils of academic freedom and tenure. But historically, academic freedom was yoked with academic responsibility, as the AAUP's 1915 "Declaration of Principles" makes abundantly clear:
"The teacher ought also to be especially on his guard against taking unfair advantage of the students' immaturity by indoctrinating him with the teacher's own opinions before the student has had an opportunity fairly to examine other opinions upon the matters of question, and before he has sufficient knowledge and ripeness in judgment to be entitled to form any definitive opinion of his own. It is not the least service which a college or university may render to those under its instruction, to habituate them to looking not only patiently but methodically on both sides, before adopting any conclusion upon controverted issues."
Is this the experience of college students today? Hardly. Even Professor O'Neil admits that the AAUP's own committee on academic responsibility withered away and "no longer exists." If you are still curious about what "academic freedom" means today, FIRE, NoIndoctrination.org, and Indoctrinate U expose what the glossy college brochures conceal, and if the public now demands a look inside the sausage factory, academics have no one to blame but themselves.
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