I am an early Christmas shopper. Are you? I like to have all my Christmas shopping completed before Thanksgiving. This year I haven't started, but I plan to begin soon.
If you are interested in giving a gardening book, the book I am reviewing this month would make a beautiful gift. It is a true "coffee table book". A book that one can leaf through and see gorgeous and inspirational pictures that could spark a conversation about gardens and gardening.
However, this book would only be appropriate for those gardeners that love formal design, or English gardens. Look around at their garden. You should be able to tell if their taste is formal or not.
The book is:
The English Formal Garden:
Five Centuries of Design
by Gunter Mader and Laila Neubert-Mader
The book starts with a comprehensive history of the English garden, covering over 500 years of design. I read the history, but that's not why I love this book. It's the pictures I love to thumb through! In fact, I could sit for hours just looking at all the pictures, and dreaming.
There are 10 gardens that are specifically covered: Montacute House, Parnham House, Pitmedden, Penshurst Place, Hidcote Manor, Hestercombe Garden, Snowshill Manor, Sissinghurst Castle Garden, Hazelby Garden, and Barnsley House.
But that's not all! The majority of the book is broken into the features of a formal English garden: trees, hedges and walls, gateways, terraces, garden steps, garden paths, pergolas, knot gardens and parterres, the sunken garden, flower borders and color themes, topiary, statuary, garden seats, water, lawns and flower meadows, summerhouse, kitchen gardens, and orchards.
It is these features, and all the pictures and drawings, plus the additional explanation included about each feature, that will get you dreaming about how you can incorporate these into your own garden (if you like this style).
In fact, there is more than adequate inspiration in this book. For instance, under Knots and Parterres, there are over 40 drawn designs of knot gardens should you wish to put one in your own garden. (Yes, I'm dreaming of one!) There are also several different pond designs, summerhouses, garden steps and path designs. See what I mean about inspiration?
If you live in England, or plan on visiting, there is even a list (their opinion) of the 100 most beautiful formal gardens in the British Isles.
This is a nice, heavy, thick book. Anyone that loves formal English garden design would greatly enjoy receiving this book as a gift. I checked prices online, and they vary greatly. From $12 for a used book, to $25 for a new hardcover, up to over $100 in some places, be sure you know what you're getting. A little shopping around for the price and condition you are wanting may be in order.
This book was first published in German in 1992 and the English version came out in 1997. Although not a newly released book, this book and the gardens shown within its pages are timeless.
If this isn't the type of book you'd like to give, I'll have another suggestion next month. Or you might find just the perfect book in one of the entries below, or on the page listing
all books reviewed so far this year.
Garden pictures in this post are from the Annie duPont Formal Garden and the garden at Ashlawn-Highland.
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You are invited to join us on the 20th each month with your own garden book review. Any book with a garden influence qualifies!
Now it's your turn! What garden book will you be reviewing this month?