List of Published Books on Gardening and Natural History-- Some
Still In Print and Some Out-of-Print
---The Indoor Water Gardener's How-to Handbook. (1973): A book
about hydroponics for house plants featuring over 150 plant varieties that
not only survive, but grow in water, whether on a windowsill, decorating a
wall, or flourishing under artificial light. ---Bringing the
Outdoors In. (1974): All about growing a wide variety of perennials,
annuals, bulbs, orchids, native plants, and imaginative house plants
indoors using window greenhouses. ---Growing and Decorating with
Grasses. (1977): The first popular book on using ornamental grasses in
the garden and as additions to floral arrangements and bouquets.
---Gardens by Design. (1986):
Step-by-step plans for twelve imaginative gardens ranging from a garden of
all annuals to a garden for winter to a meadow garden. Over 200 plants are
illustrated. ---The Annual Garden. (1987): Listed as on of the
50 great garden books by the National Agricultural Library, the book deals
with annual plants both for flowers or foliage and includes many tropicals
used as garden annuals. Now out-of-print.
---American Gardens. (1988): A photographic celebration featuring
thirty of the finest private gardens from all over the United States. The
text focuses on the inspiring details and imaginative solutions that makes
these gardens so special and their individual gardeners so unique. Now
out-of-print.
---A Year of Flowers. (1989):
Here's how to grow over 150 flowering plants, including annuals,
perennials, bulbs, wildflowers, everlastings, and a host of house plants.
It's a month-by-month salute to flowers. Now out-of-print.
---The Wild Gardener. (1991): The Wild Gardener was named one
of the 75 best gardening books of the 20th Century by the American
Horticultural Society. The book salutes the American garden as a refuge from
the teeming world that surrounds today's home and hearth and the daily threats
that plague our existence.
---Secrets of the Great Gardeners. (1991): Originally
entitled Secrets of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden the name was
changed by the editorial department of Summit Books (a branch of Simon
& Schuster) because they thought nobody knew anything about Brooklyn,
much less a great botanic garden located in its domain. Needless to say
the book features on-the-spot interviews with the gardeners who make the
BBG such a marvelous place to visit. Now out-of-print.
---Tough Plants for Tough Places. (1992): The original title for
the original book that dealt with 101 easy-care plants for every part of your
yard. "It's always fun to romp through another garden read with Peter Loewer,"
said The New York Times. So popular that a garden book from England
used the title for American audiences. Now out-of-print.
---The Evening Garden.(1993): The first complete (and only serious)
book ever written about gardening with night-blooming and night-fragrant
plants sold well 1994 but has been out-of-print since 1995 when, due to
financial shennanagans, the great Macmillan Company went belly-up! "With
this book," wrote Pamela Harper, author of Designing with
Perennials, "Loewer treads new ground, covering a neglected gardening
topic comprehensively, lucidly, with infectious enthusiasm." And now
thanks to Timber Press, America's premium publisher of gardening books
from around the world, The Evening Garden is no longer available at
bookstores around the country (or the world) and your best bet in finding
a copy is to log onto ABE, The American Book Exchange, where they represent
thousands of small bookstores found throughout the USA, Canada, and Great
Britian.
---The New Small Garden.
(1994): Twenty-six garden designs and hundreds of plant descriptions
especially for gardening in the small spaces of a condominium patio, a
townhouse courtyard, or backyard corner. Now out-of-print.
---Seeds. (1995): The life of a garden begins
and ends with a seed. This book gives explanations of virtually everything
that happens from the production of a seed (including the genetics involved)
to seed germination. If you don't find that the life of a seed beginning with
an insect pollinator like a bee, right up to the breaking of the mature seed
coat Published again by Timber Press in 2004.
---Thoreau's Garden. (1996): A combination of
insightful excerpts from the journals of Henry Thoreau and Loewer's
botanical illustrations and comments on more than fifty native plants that
were favorites of Thoreau's and grow in Loewer's Asheville gardens. This
edition is the new paperback edition from Stackpole
Press.
---The Winter Garden: Planning and Planting for the Southeast (1997):
Winter-bound gardeners from USDA Zone 6 and south, will enjoy this
armchair walk though the snow- or ice-threatened garden, with Loewer
extolling the virtues and exposing the vices of a host of plants, all
beautifully illustrated with Larry Mellichamp's photographs.
---Fragrant Gardens. (1999): One of the delights of
a garden are the wonderful fragrances provided by a number of beautiful
and not-so-beautiful flowers. Straightforward garden care advice includes
information on handling different soil types, controlling pests, creating
raised beds, and growing all those blossoms with perfumes that delight the
nose and scent the garden air. Ever smelled a night-blooming daylily in
full bloom?
---Solving Weed Problems. (2001): They seed, they sprout, and often
take over local worlds turning our pride and joy into a maelstrom of
malcontented plants, plants with a mission to attack! Some weeds defy the
might of the gardener but luckily they are few and far between. Most
weeds, once we understand their likes and dislikes, will succumb to the
will of the gardener, usually requiring only a steady hand and a sharp
knife or hoe. Solving Weed Problems is divided into sections
covering annual and perennial weeds, then shrubs and trees, aquatic weeds,
and a number of the worst lawn weeds. A few weeds stand up to the worst we
have to offer but then the text is honest and tells the reader that a trip
to the local extension service is required (I never recommend deadly
herbicides but the government sometimes does).
---Solving Deer Problems. (2003): They breed,
they snout, and eat up everything in sight, stopping only at oleander and
antique brick. Fear the deer! Nature has never invented a more efficient
killing maching--at least from the point of view of garden plants. Able to
leap an eight-foot fence, sneak silently through the suburbs at night, and
outrun a greyhound (not to mention a beagle or Labrador retriever), the
deer is the number on enemy not only of the gardener but also of anyone
who wants to relax in the backyard. This book concentrates on the best
answers to the growing deer problem in these United States. You can love
these animals but keep your affection for the deer roaming the great
outdoors and not nibbling on your roses or devouring your
shrubs.
---Small-Space Gardening. (2003): There's no end to the advantages
of gardening in containers, and this new book on the subject provides a
perfect introduction. Containers, of course, are the norm in cities and
suburbs, where space is at a premium, but even gardeners with plenty of
room will appreciate the benefits of container planting. Potted plants
dress up front walks, hang brightly from the limbs of trees, and energize
a deck with color and life. They are a great laboratory for "experiments,"
and allow a gardener to grow plants that wouldn't otherwise winter over in
northerly climate zones. Older gardeners also love container gardening for
its relative simplicity and east of maintenance. This book covers light,
dormancy, temperature, and watering, potting soils and mixes, vertical
gardens, water gardens, growing fruits in pots, forcing bulbs, bonsai
hostas, ornamental grasses, bamboos, perennials, conifers, alpine pots,
and even heavy-metal gardening.
---Jefferson's Garden.
(2004): This book is in homage to one of the truly great Americans. Instead
of focusing on his political accomplishments, Jefferson's Garden
deals with the fascinating plants that he brought to Monticello over a
lifetime of gardening. Included in the many plant biographies are scientific
and common name derivations, where the plants came from and how Jefferson
learned about their existence, and many more facts about their place on
the planet. Each plant is illustrated with a pen and ink rendering of both
leaf and flower.
---Ornamental Grasses for the Southeast(2004): Ornamental grasses have
outlived their reputation for being an oddity or a sometime thing in the garden
and have, instead, become one of those plant families that are now in the
perennial mainstream and stars of the garden across the country. But the
southern climate is a lot warmer than New York or Pennsylvania so now there's
a book that covers all the grasses that do their best when the weather's hot
and sunny--not to mention hot and damp! Even Zone 10 and the heat of Southern
Florida has a niche in the contents of this book! And the illustrations: They are
large photos full of color and botancial renderings of the more unusual grasses
and grass-like plants.
---Native Perennials for the Southeast(2006): A companion book to
ornamental grasses, this new salute to native perennials is meant to introduce
all of the marvelous plants that bloom and bloom, are usually impervious to bouts
of bad weather, shrug of hard rains, hunker down to deep freezes, or lack desires
of soils that resemble--at least in fancy theory--horticultural oils of Olay.
Illustrated with telling photos or botanical illustrations, you'll find an
amazing selection of plants ranging from bog and water lovers, to small trees for small
gardens, vines, ferns, grasses and sedges, not to mention comments by other gardeners
living south of the Mason-Dixon Line and knowing what they are talking about,
especially when it comes to gardening!
Since the days of Queen Victoria (and earlier the harems of the Middle East)
flowers have allowed lovers and friends to express themselves without saying
a word. In Loves Me, Loves Me Not, I explore the fascinating history of floral
messages. In this book you'll find intriguing plant lore, unexpected historical
connections, or simly an opportunity to connect with a beloved in a unique way.
Confess unrequited love with a daffodil; show happiness with primroses; or make
your declaration of love--not with a rose--but with a tulip! Just docking from
a ship that sailed from China (that's where American books come from today),
you'll find this a great gift when visiting family or friends. And at home,
instead plunking down on the coffee table a twenty-pound salute to the gardens
of England, try this small, lightweight salute to the glory of flowers--period.
This informative, full-color guide you can now plan memorable trips to the beautiful
gardens of North Carolina. There are fifty gardens found in three regions of the
state--The Mountains, The Piedmont, and The Coastal Plain--giving full descriptions,
how to get there, and all the visitor information you'll need. The book should be
in bookstores for early spring of 2007, ready for the highways and biways of a state
that supports a most amazing range of public gardens.
Children's Books (Illustrated by Jean Jenkins)
---The Inside-Out Stomach. (1990): From the one-celled amoeba to the largest
invertebrate, the giant, fifty-foot squid, here's a book about all those
animals that exist without the backbones that make standing upright such
an easy thing for human beings (not to mention dogs and cats), to
do. ---Pond Water Zoo. (1996): A drop of pond water is crowded
with thousands of living things too small to be seen by the human eye.
Diatoms live in beautifully etched glass like shells while algaes float
effortlessly in the water like long strings of green pearls.Pond Water
Zoo brings this world within the reach of anyone with a simple
microscope and a glass of pond water. ---The Moonflower. (1997):
When the sun sets and the moon shimmers above, the night comes alive. Bats
swoop, hawkmoths flit, owls hunt, and the moonflower unfurls for its one
night in the moonlight. This is a great book to introduce children to the
marvels of nature, wonders that seem to come alive when the sun begins to
set.
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