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   Book Info

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Taylor's Encyclopedia of Garden Plants  
Author: Frances Tenenbaum (Editor)
ISBN: 0618226443
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
This beautifully illustrated encyclopedia offers North American gardeners a definitive resource for all their questions, from flowers to trees to shrubs. Long-time Houghton Mifflin editor Tenenbaum (who has edited the Taylor series for more than 30 years) arranges her book alphabetically according to genus, then breaks plants down by species (an index of common names helps readers follow the Latin terms). Under Ficus, for example, is a pronunciation key ("FYE-kus"), the common family name (Mulberry), then a description ("It exhibits potentially unlimited growth in warm gardens"; "as a vine, it clings tenaciously by secreting a tiny amount of latex"); and finally, suggestions for growing ("It will perform best in moist well-drained loamy soil"). At the end of the book, Tenenbaum features succinct, clearly illustrated directions for propagating plants, whether growing them from seed or by dividing or taking cuttings. 1,200 color photos. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Positioned as the only plant encyclopedia intended solely for the American gardener, Taylor's directory encompasses more than one thousand trees, shrubs, vines, and perennials suitable for a garden located anywhere in North America. An ambitious compilation, it bears the Taylor trademark of reliable information imparted in an entertaining but usable manner, and highlighted by superlative production values that include an easy-to-navigate layout, crisp photography, and detailed illustrations. The alphabetical directory of plants is organized by genus and supported by a common-name index for quick cross-referencing. Each entry offers a brief yet thorough description of plant habit and culture, with valuable tips on planting, climate, size, bloom, noteworthy cultivars, and comparable species. An entire chapter is devoted to plant propagation, and precise illustrations accompany the text detailing proper techniques for sowing seed, taking cuttings, and dividing plants. Taylor's comprehensive guide to North American plant material is designed to be used as a single-source reference and destined to become a time-honored resource for novice and experienced gardener alike. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"The reference book that earned an instant spot on my shelf."

Review
"The reference book that earned an instant spot on my shelf."

Book Description
At the heart of every garden are the plants, which enhance our land and engage our souls. For gardeners, no matter how new or how advanced, whether we cultivate for ourselves or for landscaping clients, plants are the sine qua non. They intrigue us and inspire us. And the more we learn about them, the more they add to our pleasure in gardening. For all of these reasons, every gardener needs a good plant encyclopedia. And, as the only plant encyclopedia written exclusively for North American gardeners, Taylor"s Encyclopedia of Garden Plants will be as useful twenty years from now as it is today. If a plant can"t be grown on this continent, you won"t find it here. Readers will use this book in a number of ways: as a resource for identifying plants, as a guide to purchasing the best species and cultivars for particular gardening locations and growing conditions, and as an important way to save the cost and disappointment of buying plants that won"t thrive or will overwhelm a garden. Choosing just the right tree or shrub can add the crowning touch to your landscape plan. Here you"ll find expert information about more than a thousand species of trees, shrubs, roses, bulbs, perennials, annuals, and ground covers. Illustrated with 1,200 color photos and hundreds of line drawings, the encyclopedia includes instructions on how to grow the plants and even on how to propagate many of them. An extensive glossary and a common name index make this book accessible to beginners as well as longtime gardeners. Like gardening itself, Taylor"s Encyclopedia of Garden Plants will bring its readers immediate pleasure as well as long-term rewards.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
IntroductionAlthough gardening has many aspects, and gardeners have special interests, the single incontrovertible fact is that everything begins with plants. Whether you are a new gardener or a longtime expert, whether you collect books and articles on your favorite subject or want a single volume that you can refer to today and twenty years from now, you need an encyclopedia of plants. In many ways this book is the culmination of the series of Taylor"s Guides that began in the 1980s, inspired by horticulturist Norman Taylor, whose classic garden encyclopedia was first published by Houghton Mifflin in 1936 and last revised in 1956. As with all of the Taylor"s Guides, the aim in this book is to be thorough, accurate, dependable, and useful to North American gardeners. As we have shown in the plant guides, as well as in the other Taylor"s books, it is quite possible to make a practical reference book attractive and pleasurable to use. The text is readable, and the pictures and layout are beautiful. Like gardening itself, this book will give you immediate joy as well as long-term rewards.HOW THE PLANTS ARE ARRANGEDTo make this book useful to both experienced and novice gardeners, as well as professionals, the plants are organized alphabetically by genus name. A genus is a group of plants that share a certain number of characteristics. Within the genus are species, and the species name refers to only one plant. A genus may have a single species or it may include hundreds. The genus Cornus, for example, has a number of trees: flowering dogwood, Cornus florida; Pacific dogwood, Cornus nuttallii; pagoda dogwood, Cornus alternifolia; and several others. It also has shrubs, such as red osier dogwood, Cornus stolonifera, and the elegant little ground cover Cornus canadensis, or bunchberry. This system of terminology is easier to use than it sounds; to find any of these plants in the encyclopedia, all you need to know is its common name. The index of common names (page 431) will lead you to the botanical name of the genus that the plant belongs to, which you can find listed alphabetically. "Dogwood" or "bunchberry" will lead you to Cornus, and there you will find entries for all of the Cornus species covered in the book. Why not arrange the encyclopedia by common names in the first place? The reason is that although common names are often charming and descriptive (and none of us is likely to call a marigold a Tagetes), only the botanical name identifies the exact, specific plant. In this book there are at least ten very different plants whose name begins with the word "false," such as false indigo and false Solomon"s seal, and five that begin with "glory." "Ironweed" could be Ostrya, a tree, or Vernonia, a wildflower. Is the plant you admired in a friend"s garden love-in-a mist, love-in-apuff, or love-lies-bleeding? Or might it be bleeding heart? Harry Lauder"s walking stick (named for an early-twentieth-century British comic entertainer) is both descriptive of this corkscrew shrub and easier to remember than Corylus avellana "Contorta". Poached-egg plant is certainly a more colorful name than Limnanthes douglasii. And I"d hate to see names like lion"s ear and tidy tips and blue-eyed grass disappear from the gardener"s vocabulary. But when you are looking for accurate information, you need to know what plant you are talking about. Is your prince"s feather an Amaranthus or a Persicaria? Look up any of these names in the index of common names, and you"ll be referred to the genus to which the plant belongs. In the entry you"ll find a description of the species and an illustration to help you identify the plant in your friend"s garden. Should you want to grow it yourself, you"ll learn whether it will survive in your climate, how to plant it, and what further information you need to know to succeed with that plant. You"ll also find the names of hybrids and cultivars that may be improvements over the species. (In the glossary on page 424, you"ll find definitions of the terms hybrid and cultivar and of many other botanical terms used in this book.)HOW WE DECIDED WHICH PLANTS TO INCLUDEIn an encyclopedia like this, more is not necessarily better. We have included at least one thousand species of desirable plants for American gardens; to list all available species would require a volume as large and unwieldy as a Manhattan phone book. We have obviously had to make choices, based on the knowledge and experience of the Taylor"s Guide editors. For example, you"ll find here the dawn redwood, Metasequoia — once thought to be extinct but now available as a desirable garden tree — but not the Sequoia, the tallest tree in the world, or the massive giant sequoia, Sequoiadendron, both of which are recommended mainly for public parks and large estates. Some plants are not recommended for home gardens because they are invasive, but deciding which ones to eliminate turned out to be a rather complicated issue. A handsome perennial like purple loosestrife (Lythrum) does not appear in this book because the plants are such rampant invaders of wetlands that some states actually ban them; even the supposedly sterile cultivars have been found to set seeds. Some popular genera include species that are invasive and species that are not, as well as some that are problematic in one part of the country but not in others. Some common plants that fall into these good/bad categories are privet (Ligustrum), bittersweet (Celastrus), burning bush (Euonymus), barberry (Berberis), and honeysuckle (Lonicera). Before you decide on a plant for your own property, be sure to read the entry for that species. Readers who are concerned about this subject should consult the handbook Invasive Plants, published by the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.HARDINESSWill the plant you are considering grow where you live? For gardeners, this is the question that matters most. If you do not know the plant zone of your geographic area, look at the U.S. Department of Agriculture Plant Hardiness Zone Map on pages 446–47. The zones range from Zone 1, the coldest, to Zone 11, the hottest. (In a new map, scheduled to be published in 2003, the major changes are the addition of the tropical zones, 12 through 15.) No zones are given for annual plants, which live for one growing season only, no matter what the climate. You"ll also find some plants listed as tender perennials. Although these will live and rebloom in succeeding seasons in warm or tropical zones, in most parts of the country they are grown as annuals. Except for annuals and tender perennials, the plant descriptions give a range of zones. The first number in the range indicates the northern limit of hardiness, while the second is a guideline to how much heat the plant can handle. For example, peach-leaved bellflower (Campanula persicifolia), hardy from Zone 3 to Zone 7, is fairly cold-tolerant: it withstands Zone 3 winters, with average annual minimum temperatures of -30° to-40°F. But it is not particularly tolerant of heat and doesn"t grow well in the hot summers characteristic of areas south of Zone 7. The northern limits of the zone ranges are based on average minimum temperatures taken from 6,700 weather stations and do not include any of the other variables that can affect a plant"s hardiness, such as a freak ice storm, an unusually warm winter, a year of drought, or being planted next to a south-facing brick wall. A good predictor of a plant"s success in your garden is finding it in other gardens in your area. But the USDA Zone Map is a useful place to start, especially if you are considering a tree or other valuable plant. The second number in the zone range, the southern heat limit, is based on the experience of professional growers and gardeners. If your own garden has a cold microclimate, you may be able to succeed with that Zone 3 to 7 bellflower even if you live in Zone 8.At the very least, gardening is an enjoyable pastime; at the most, it is a passion. To all who use this book, we hope it will fulfill your needs and increase your pleasure.— Frances TenenbaumCopyright © 2003 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Company.




Taylor's Encyclopedia of Garden Plants

FROM THE PUBLISHER

At the heart of every garden are the plants, which enhance our land and engage our souls. For gardeners, no matter how new or how advanced, whether we cultivate for ourselves or for landscaping clients, plants are the sine qua non. They intrigue us and inspire us. And the more we learn about them, the more they add to our pleasure in gardening. For all of these reasons, every gardener needs a good plant encyclopedia. And, as the only plant encyclopedia written exclusively for North American gardeners, Taylor's Encyclopedia of Garden Plants will be as useful twenty years from now as it is today. If a plant can't be grown on this continent, you won't find it here. Readers will use this book in a number of ways: as a resource for identifying plants, as a guide to purchasing the best species and cultivars for particular gardening locations and growing conditions, and as an important way to save the cost and disappointment of buying plants that won't thrive or will overwhelm a garden. Choosing just the right tree or shrub can add the crowning touch to your landscape plan. Here you'll find expert information about more than a thousand species of trees, shrubs, roses, bulbs, perennials, annuals, and ground covers. Illustrated with 1,200 color photos and hundreds of line drawings, the encyclopedia includes instructions on how to grow the plants and even on how to propagate many of them. An extensive glossary and a common name index make this book accessible to beginners as well as long-time gardeners. Like gardening itself, Taylor's Encyclopedia of Garden Plants will bring its readers immediate pleasure as well as long-term rewards.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

This beautifully illustrated encyclopedia offers North American gardeners a definitive resource for all their questions, from flowers to trees to shrubs. Long-time Houghton Mifflin editor Tenenbaum (who has edited the Taylor series for more than 30 years) arranges her book alphabetically according to genus, then breaks plants down by species (an index of common names helps readers follow the Latin terms). Under Ficus, for example, is a pronunciation key ("FYE-kus"), the common family name (Mulberry), then a description ("It exhibits potentially unlimited growth in warm gardens"; "as a vine, it clings tenaciously by secreting a tiny amount of latex"); and finally, suggestions for growing ("It will perform best in moist well-drained loamy soil"). At the end of the book, Tenenbaum features succinct, clearly illustrated directions for propagating plants, whether growing them from seed or by dividing or taking cuttings. 1,200 color photos. (Nov. 3) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Compiled from the updated series of "Taylor's Guides" and edited by Tenenbaum, a Houghton gardening editor for almost 30 years, this is an authoritative encyclopedia of garden plants suitable for most North American gardens. Concise, easy to read, attractively laid out, and packed with information, the text includes over 1000 species (with myriad cultivars) of trees, shrubs, roses, perennials, annuals, bulbs, and ground covers. The book is arranged by scientific name, with each entry including genus name, pronunciation, plant family, where the plant is native, number of species, a general description, cultivation, uses in the landscape, where the plant grows best (from area of the country to garden site), and any pests or diseases. Next comes species information, with pronunciation, size, USDA hardiness zones, and recommended cultivars, including descriptions. The book concludes with a brief section on propagating plants, a glossary, and a common names index. Line drawings and over 1200 clear color photographs complement the text. Similar in arrangement and content, but more comprehensive still, The American Horticultural Society A-Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants (AHS) includes more than 2000 genera with 15,000 entries and almost 6000 photographs. It also includes orchids, bromeliads, cacti, succulents, palms, cycads, and aquatics, plants not included in Taylor's Encyclopedia. Libraries already owning AHS that are on a tight budget may want to skip this new encyclopedia, and libraries in desert and tropical regions will find AHS more useful, but others should add this work to their reference collections and consider adding a circulating copy. Highly recommended.-Sue O'Brien, Downers Grove P.L., IL Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

     



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