Midwest gardens

Pamela Wolfe

Book - 1991

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2nd Floor 635.0977/Wolfe Withdrawn
Subjects
Published
Chicago : Chicago Review Press c1991.
Language
English
Main Author
Pamela Wolfe (-)
Other Authors
Gary Irving (-)
Physical Description
206 p. : col. photos
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781556521386
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Featured are 22 perennial midwestern gardens located in urban, suburban, and rural areas. Wolfe, a botanist, dedicates her expertise to addressing the particular challenges resulting from extreme weather patterns common to the area, including cycles of freezing/thawing/freezing that are anathema to the longevity of many plants. Suggestions encompass methods for dealing with soil quality while identifying "microclimates" in individual gardens. Concluding each segment is a summary of tips offered by each of the various gardeners interviewed, designed to help ensure successful results for readers. Color photography by Gary Irving enhances the text. ~--Alice Joyce

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

An exceptionally fine collaboration between gardener and teacher Wolfe and award-winning photographer Irving, Midwesterners both, this ``inspiration'' and ``practical guide'' showcases 22 outstanding gardens from the Upper Midwest. And though the Midwest is often considered too harsh climatically to yield gardens in the grand English style, Wolfe and Irving convincingly claim otherwise. Under the tutelage of such gardeners as Thomas and Helene James, for example, poetic borders of old shrub roses and European perennials can flourish in Wilmette, Ill.; in White Bear, Minn., Betty Matthew's collection of miniature roses and delphiniums thrives. Other gardens in this eclectic anthology bypass the perennial border, ranging from Russell O'Harra'ssic baroque displays of hostas to Polly Rabion's ambitious garden designed for handicapped visitors to Pat Armstrong's restoration of native Illinois prairie, in which she uses the traditional annual burn as a method of controlling weeds. Irving's photographs focus on color, texture, and small-scale patterns as they intimately detail the gardens, while Wolfe's text homes in on the creative strategies behind them. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

This selection of 22 private gardens from six states shows that despite clay soils, sub-zero winters, and steamy summers, the Midwest is home to some truly inspirational and personal landscapes. More than 170 color photographs by nature photographer Irving document this eclectic tour of urban, suburban, and rural properties. Midwestern native Wolfe integrates plant information with interviews and quotes from the gardeners themselves and sidebars offering gardening tips inspired and suggested by each garden visited. Similar in feel and presentation to Peter Loewer's American Gardens (S. & S., 1988), this book is recommended for Midwestern libraries and for other libraries where interest in garden photography and private gardens is high.--Virginia A. Henrichs, Chicago Botanic Garden Lib., Glencoe, Ill. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.