gardening and horticulture |
Aftersleep Books
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P Allen Smith s Garden HomeThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
It's not as easy, though, to visualize an ordinary city garden in terms of rooms. The writer helps us make this transition by using his own city garden as an example. This spans two city lots, so it's wider than most, but he shows how he has taken each axis and divided it, yet allowed each room to flow into the next. In the first part of the book the writer explains how he went about planning them and how each of the rooms developed.
The second section of the book defines twelve principles of design and gives examples and illustrations of each. These clearly and simply presented principles - from color to shape and form and not forgetting whimsy and mystery - offer down-to-earth and practical ideas.
The third section, which for some reason is printed on different paper and has no illustrations other than sketches, offers more of the writer's thoughts on the application of the twelve design principles.
The content of this book is well thought out and well presented, and the color photographs in the first two sections are generous and relevant. My quibbles are - first, the strange presentation of the third section as if the book designer decided to make it as dull as possible so no-one would read it. Second, the fact that in the list of U. S. gardens to visit there isn't a single one listed from the Pacific Northwest.
Two other things bothered me. The first is the writer's glee at associating himself with Lord and Lady Ashbrook of Arley Hall in England (Local boy makes good!! Entertained by nobility!!) The second is having the writer's photograph prominent on the front cover. Yes, he's cute, and yes, I like eye candy as much as anyone else, but that was a bit much. Whatever sells books, I guess, but I felt it cheapened a very valuable addition to the gardener's library.