Paths of Desire: The Passions of a Suburban Gardener
I kind of wanted to despise Dominique Browning. She is the pale-blue-eyed editor of House & Garden magazine, she has a fabulous house, she has a fantastic garden. And she's named Dominique, for heaven's sake. How glamorous is that?
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Impatient patience
Books that soothe the itch to get back in the dirt REVIEWS BY ANN SHAYNE Anybody who loves to garden is having a hard time right now. Here in the mid-South, March gives up a few days so mild that I can't help but get outside and dig something. The last frost doesn't come until mid-April, but that never stops me from putting some little thing out that would have preferred to stay inside. I am very, very impatient. This year a number of books are helping me take a breath, step back, and find patience in waiting for the seasons to change. I have enjoyed the work of Ken Druse for many years. His first book, The Natural Garden, was a revelation, filled with pictures of places that hardly looked like "gardens" at all. Artful jungles is more like it. Druse is not trimming topiary; he is creating subtle, elegant gardens that feel like they were planted by Mother Nature herself. He is all about staying close to the place you are gardening: use native plants, be sensitive to the microclimate of your property, remember nature. Each book he writes is an occasion for joy, and his new book, The Passion for Gardening: Inspiration for a Lifetime is his most joyful yet.
By Ken Druse Clarkson Potter, $50 256 pages, ISBN 0517707888
Dutch treat
By Piet Oudolf and Henk Gerritsen Timber, $34.95 144 pages, ISBN 088192606X
The basics? Begin here
The latest Taylor's Guidea whopper as big as the Master Guidecontinues the same concise, clear format that has helped me so much. Taylor's Encyclopedia of Garden Plants is filled with more than 1,200 plants: perennials, annuals, grasses, trees, shrubs. It's not every plant ever propagated; it's every plant that the Taylor's Guide experts feel is a good choice for North American gardens. A plant encyclopedia can be many things: a reference, a wish book, a troubleshooter. Taylor's Encyclopedia of Garden Plants is all these, produced in the most straightforward, lovely way possible. One small note: Taylor's gives the pronunciation of each plant, which is a merciful thing when you are trying to sound all smart and name that little blue flower but can't figure out how to say "platycodon." (It's "plat-ee-KOE-don.")
Houghton Mifflin, $45 447 pages, ISBN 0618226443
Getting the yard you want
This book gives the details of projects you may have seen on HGTV programs. Curb appeal, privacy, overcoming problem areasthere are tons of ideas in here to help make your landscape beautiful. Each project is rated in difficulty, time, cost and skills required. Landscape Makeovers is as satisfying as a night watching HGTV. Unlike the shows, however, this book explains exactly how to achieve the results you want. In this book, all seems possible.
Edited by Marilyn Rogers Meredith, $19.95 224 pages, ISBN 0696217643
The ultimate in patience
Denckla is such a gentle advocate for organic gardening that you can't help but want to try it, too. There is nothing shrill or dogmatic about the way she explains her subject. She debunks all the myths of organic gardening (it's expensive/difficult/time consuming) with sensible truths, and the result is this manifesto of how to grow food that is in tune with nature. In the book, Denckla reveals her own evolution as an organic gardener. Wanting to learn about the old ways, she began collecting information, and after four years, she discovered she had a book. A wonderful one, in fact. She explains how to grow every imaginable vegetable, nut and fruit, explaining the importance of rotating crops, planting a diverse garden and growing certain plant allies near each other. There's a rogues' gallery of evil pests, with non-toxic remedies; a list of plants that grow well togetherallies; and appendices full of organic gardening standards and resources. You will learn a lot with this book, and it may change the way you treat your garden.
By Tanya L.K. Denckla Storey, $22.95 484 pages, ISBN 1580173705
A soggy epilogue At the end of Ken Druse's Passion for Gardening is a stunning photograph of his garden, his beloved garden, flooded by the river that runs beside it. However traumatic this was for him (it had to be akin to Hemingway losing a manuscript), he writes about it with equanimity. I am taking to heart his conclusion: "I am indeed the junior partner in this collaboration with nature"a partnership that requires nothing but patience.
Ann Shayne is a former editor of BookPage. She tends her garden in Nashville.
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