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   Book Info

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Garden Whimsy  
Author: Tovah Martin, et al
ISBN: 0395937310
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review



There is no question that gardening inspires creativity and playfulness. A full measure of both is captured in this book on garden accessories. Giant bronze frogs standing erect and playing the sax and cello, sunflowers sporting hats, fence posts sprouting gloves, and a bench with undulating serpent arms are just a few of the compelling images captured in the many color photographs.

Gardeners tend to be eccentrics, and it looks as if the gardeners in this book have fully indulged their visions, making the very best kinds of personal gardens. While many of the ideas are large and expensive, such as Italian stone follies carved into huge mask faces topped with bridges, or gazing balls eight feet in diameter, many more are simple and easy to emulate. Many of the lightest touches are created with paint or found objects--trellises woven of twigs, fences built of old shovels and rakes, a shed roof painted cobalt blue, or a scarecrow dressed up in bohemian duds including shawl and beret. What makes all these delightful ideas work is that they are buried amid flower borders or set onto pedestals on smooth expanses of emerald lawn--what better backdrop could any flight of whimsy ask for than a beautiful garden? --Valerie Easton


From Publishers Weekly
Martin and Brown (Tasha Tudor's Garden) take a walk on the lighter side of horticulture. Postulating that "gardeners suffer from a tendency to take themselves too seriously," the pair drop in on 10 practitioners of the craft who have learned to cut loose a little. Clearly inspired by their subjects (quirky green thumbs who leaven their compost with irreverent wit and creative flair), the authors chronicle found art and impertinent plant pairings. Whether visiting a plot presided over by a prom queen scarecrow (a classic Grecian nude attired in a flaming pink strapless evening gown), debating the exact hue of a 1955 Chevy pickup that has inadvertently become a garden feature (Martin describes it as "cantaloupe," the owner counters with "Velveeta") or coaxing confessions from wags such as the one whose yard sports a short-necked topiary giraffe ("I got tired halfway up"), Martin's text is hilarious and filled with lively anecdotes. Brown's lush photographs, meanwhile, capture the outdoor audacity in all its glory. They will have even the most staid gardeners looking for ways to spice up the landscape. (Nov.) Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
Gardeners who have spent the summer battling the heat, the droughts, and the ever-encroaching weeds will find pleasure in this book. Martin (Tasha Tudor's Garden) and Brown combine their skills here to present a lighthearted look at some eccentric but always charming people who take a slightly different approach to their gardens. Ten New England gardeners are profiled, including a couple whose garden is filled with humorous signs and mirrors that play tricks on visitors, a man whose obsession with sunflowers takes on a macabre tone, and a Connecticut woman whose riotous color schemes must be confined to the back lest she offend her subdued neighbors. Interspersed are brief passages that profile elements of the whimsical garden, such as topiaries, statues, and birdhouses. Every chapter is a delight, and the accompanying photographs are wonderful. Recommended for public libraries.APhillip Oliver, Univ. of North Alabama Lib., Florence Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Boston Globe
"Most garden art that reaches for humor is really so dumb and ugly that it scares gardeners into playing it straight. So when the team that brought us the best-selling 'Tasha's Tudor Garden' went on the hunt for horticultural levity, its challenge was to find garden features that could, like actress Cameron Diaz, make us laugh while still looking enchanting." --


Philadelphia Inquirer
"...a lighthearted but thorough investigation of humor in American gardens."


Review
"...a lighthearted but thorough investigation of humor in American gardens."


Review
"...a lighthearted but thorough investigation of humor in American gardens."


Book Description
If it sometimes seems that gardening is all work and no play, here's the book that will turn that canard on its head. Garden Whimsy is an entertaining look at the lighter side of gardening -- a refreshing change from how-to books on composting and double-digging. When author Tovah Martin lectures, her talk on garden whimsy is the one her audiences like best. This book brings her marvelous stories, illustrated by Richard Brown's stunning photographs, to the wider audience that has come to appreciate this talented team. So what is whimsy, botanically speaking? It may be as subtle as an inscription on a sundial or as noticeable as a child-size lighthouse. Birdhouses and scarecrows are favorite subjects, and so are topiary animals, capricious gates, and fences topped with the gardener's collection of blackbirds, kitchen utensils, or gardening gloves. It is eccentric, askew -- in short, whatever strikes a witty gardener's fancy. Best of all, it will inspire the reader to go and do likewise.




Garden Whimsy

FROM THE PUBLISHER

If it sometimes seems that gardening is all work and no play, here's the book that will turn that canard on its head. Garden Whimsy is an entertaining look at the lighter side of gardening -- a refreshing change from how-to books on composting and double-digging. When author Tovah Martin lectures, her talk on garden whimsy is the one her audiences like best. This book brings her marvelous stories, illustrated by Richard Brown's stunning photographs, to the wider audience that has come to appreciate this talented team. So what is whimsy, botanically speaking? It may be as subtle as an inscription on a sundial or as noticeable as a child-size lighthouse. Birdhouses and scarecrows are favorite subjects, and so are topiary animals, capricious gates, and fences topped with the gardener's collection of blackbirds, kitchen utensils, or gardening gloves. It is eccentric, askew -- in short, whatever strikes a witty gardener's fancy. Best of all, it will inspire the reader to go and do likewise.

FROM THE CRITICS

Boston Globe

Most garden art that reaches for humor is really so dumb and ugly that it scares gardeners into playing it straight. So when the team that brought us the best-selling 'Tasha's Tudor Garden' went on the hunt for horticultural levity, its challenge was to find garden features that could, like actress Cameron Diaz, make us laugh while still looking enchanting.

Publishers Weekly

Martin and Brown (Tasha Tudor's Garden) take a walk on the lighter side of horticulture. Postulating that "gardeners suffer from a tendency to take themselves too seriously," the pair drop in on 10 practitioners of the craft who have learned to cut loose a little. Clearly inspired by their subjects (quirky green thumbs who leaven their compost with irreverent wit and creative flair), the authors chronicle found art and impertinent plant pairings. Whether visiting a plot presided over by a prom queen scarecrow (a classic Grecian nude attired in a flaming pink strapless evening gown), debating the exact hue of a 1955 Chevy pickup that has inadvertently become a garden feature (Martin describes it as "cantaloupe," the owner counters with "Velveeta") or coaxing confessions from wags such as the one whose yard sports a short-necked topiary giraffe ("I got tired halfway up"), Martin's text is hilarious and filled with lively anecdotes. Brown's lush photographs, meanwhile, capture the outdoor audacity in all its glory. They will have even the most staid gardeners looking for ways to spice up the landscape. (Nov.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Gardeners who have spent the summer battling the heat, the droughts, and the ever-encroaching weeds will find pleasure in this book. Martin (Tasha Tudor's Garden) and Brown combine their skills here to present a lighthearted look at some eccentric but always charming people who take a slightly different approach to their gardens. Ten New England gardeners are profiled, including a couple whose garden is filled with humorous signs and mirrors that play tricks on visitors, a man whose obsession with sunflowers takes on a macabre tone, and a Connecticut woman whose riotous color schemes must be confined to the back lest she offend her subdued neighbors. Interspersed are brief passages that profile elements of the whimsical garden, such as topiaries, statues, and birdhouses. Every chapter is a delight, and the accompanying photographs are wonderful. Recommended for public libraries.--Phillip Oliver, Univ. of North Alabama Lib., Florence Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

     



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