Lilacs for the Garden
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #365999 in Books
- Published on: 2002-05-04
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 128 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
Bennett takes readers on a trip down memory lane to celebrate the lilac, a shrub many first encountered on a fragrant spring day at Grandmother's house. Waxing both nostalgic and rhapsodic, Bennett reintroduces this much-loved but underutilized shrub to a new generation of gardeners, extolling its virtues as a landscape plant: hardiness, drought-tolerance, and soil adaptability, not to mention its intoxicating fragrance and ethereal flowers. Where once lilacs were thought to thrive only in colder climes, Bennett highlights newer cultivars that tolerate hotter and dryer conditions. Stunning color photographs make you fall in love with them all over again. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Gardening Life, June/July 2002
Well-researched and -written, and lavishly illustrated, Bennett's book is an invaluable resource for the lilac lover.
Review
Total details on buying, planting, pruning, diseases and propagating from cuttings; for mail-order sources and public gardens with fine displays. (Kerry Moore Vancouver Province 20020604)
An excellent book for the beginner or the veteran gardener. (Gerald Filipski The Edmonton Journal 20071121)
Perhaps every gardener's library should include a book dedicated to this fragrant shrub. (Susan Mulvihill Spokane Spokesman 20030620)
A lucid, beautifully illustrated (with over 90 stunning color photographs) tribute to this much-loved shrub... Well researched and written. (Rachael Green American Reference Books Annual, Volume 35 2004)
In simple plain language, you will learn how (and where and when) to plant lilacs, care for lilacs. (Dan Hays Salem Statesman Journal 20020804)
Recommended ... The information is all there. (Peter W. Bristol Chicago Botanical Garden 20030511)
Makes caring for these hearty plants sound doable, even for readers with only a green-ish thumb. (HGTV.ocm 20030519)
Combines practical advice, personal observations, literary quotes and full-color photographs in an irresistible mix. (Jo Clavert Canadian Living 20030401)
Well-researched and -written, and lavishly illustrated, Bennett's book is an invaluable resource for the lilac lover. (Gardening Life 20020601)
Practical, thorough and informative ... a must-have for anyone interested in growing this gloriously hardy, sweet-smelling shrub. (Kitchener-Waterloo Record 20020504)
Full of gorgeous pictures, lilac facts ... and advice for selecting, planting, pruning and tending lilacs. (Beth Botts Chicago Tribune 20020502)
Beautifully illustrated ... likely to become a classic -- one of those you just can't bear to do without. (Jessie Deslauriers Kingston This Week 20020503)
After flipping through page after page of gorgeous photographs, I'm hooked. (David Hobson Kitchener-Waterloo Record 20020511)
An excellent guide. (Steve Whysall Southam Newspapers 20020518)
Detailed portraits... prompted me to make room for four more of these beauties in my already crowded garden. (Beckie Fox Canadian Gardening 20080430)
Covers everything... easy to read and understand -- even as she delves into hybrids and cultivars. (Patty Jesome Edmonton Sun )
A great resource book. (Rhea Hamilton-Seeger The Rural Voice (Blyth ON) )
Customer Reviews
Lilacs for the Garden
Lilacs for the Garden Jennifer Bennett
John C. Wister observed "Even with the casual attention we have given it, the lilac is the oldest and best loved American shrub."
Now you might argue that the lilac is not the oldest shrub in North America, but for many people it seems like the oldest inhabitant of the gardens they knew as children. The gardens we grew up in - our parents, grand parents and great grandparents gardens all had lilacs. My grandmother had a white lilac growing in a square foot of compacted dirt - I refuse to call it soil - in an inner city neighbourhood that was as polluted as it could be. Even as a child I admired its survival skills. Yet in these days when we have a reasonable plot of ground and amended soil, how often do we choose to plant lilacs?
Jennifer Bennet, author of several gardening books, has done a thorough job of researching the lilac, the species officially known as Syringa. Most lilacs have come to us from the mountainous regions of Asia, although two species came from Eastern Europe to France. The French, enamoured by its perfume, transformed Syringa vulgaris into a wide variety of hybrids with larger clusters of flowers, a range of colours - from white through violet and magenta to purple.
Lilacs came to North America with settlers during the 17th century. Some immigrants over 250 years old still grow on Mackinac Island, Michigan where there is a lilac festival every year. Another lilac festival is held annually in Rochester New York. And if you are looking for a major collection of lilacs, check out the Arnold Arboretum in Massachusetts, which has over 500 lilacs.
The author, besides giving her readers a useful and detailed description of different varieties of lilac, also explains plant requirements, mulching, grafting fertilizing, stresses affecting lilacs and the best way to work with lilacs that have suffered from neglect. Her last chapter is a particularly useful "Lilac Aid: Why won't it bloom?"
This is a well illustrated book, with most of the colour photographs taken by the author herself. There is a valuable resource list at the end, with mail order sources for the US and Canada, nurseries, public lilac collections and web sites with lilac information.
