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Hardcover Stalking the Wild Amaranth: Gardening in an Age of Extinction Book

ISBN: 0805044159

ISBN13: 9780805044157

Stalking the Wild Amaranth: Gardening in an Age of Extinction

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

An important horticultural memoir articulating a new landscape art that's both environmentally sensitive and rich in creativity. Janet Marinelli left her comfortable city garden to join a botanist... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Get into organic gardening...

I love this book. The author works for the wonderful Brooklyn Botanic Garden in NYC and if you haven't been--go. Ms Marinelli writes well, and I find her style pleasing. She is not preachy, but she does raise some hard questions. Unlike most writers warning us of our bad behaviour and it's affect on the future, she does not attempt to scare the reader, but rather she puts forth a reasonable discussion of the alternatives. Each of us must make some sacrifice for the greater good. And although that word has a negative connotation, until one gets the hang of delayed gratification one cannot realize the payoff is usually 5 times better than the result of immediate gratification. Think of the grassy lawn. Grassy lawns are not native to the U.S. They are bad, bad things. And although giving them up is hard to do, the alternative can be very pleasing. I have entirely replaced my grass lawn with ground covers and they look better most of the year than the grass ever did. Did you know there is a Creeping Thyme that looks like grass, grows in the hot hot sun, and needs no additional watering during the long hot summer. It looks fabulous next to a walk (especially white marble chips). The message of Ms. Marinelli's book is that there are alternaives ways of attaining gratification, and we will all be better off if we seek them.

very good

I found the book by chance, & the title tells one very little of what to expect. The author covers all the different vougues of gardening up to the present, and their impact on the environment. I especially enjoyed the critique of the insane amount of effort Americans, put into their lawn care, along with a few other toxic chemicals..and their negative effects on our water,air, local ecology & health. The author makes a good argument against herbicides, since they destroy the biodiversity possible in your garden, pesticides, and chemical fertilizers. When will the media take this up as a viable topic for disscussion? She advocates returning to planting mostly native plants. She defines what this has meant historically & ecologically. Also, she mentions the historical racist overtones of this philosophy, and how it was used in Nazi Germany.Over all a very easy & fun read. Some excellent references and good summaries. This book could be the Silent Spring for the 90's, she knows what she is talking about!
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