Product Details
The Complete Guide to Houseplants: The Easy Way to Choose and Grow Healthy, Happy Houseplants

The Complete Guide to Houseplants: The Easy Way to Choose and Grow Healthy, Happy Houseplants
By Valerie Bradley

List Price: $30.00
Price: $19.80 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

42 new or used available from $12.99

Average customer review:

Product Description

A beautifully illustrated manual for over 120 indoor plants--a practical guide packed with expert advice on how to choose, care, and display plants in the home.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #119223 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-03-23
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 288 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist
The operative term in houseplants is house, but how is one supposed to know what plant to buy for the foyer and which one will look good on the bathroom vanity? So positive is Bradley that there's a plant for every room, she kicks off her comprehensive guide to their care and use by devoting luscious two-page spreads to such residential disaster zones as the shady living room, drafty hallway, and steamy bathroom, as well as such seemingly perfect locations as the garden and sunrooms. Along with chapters on essential topics such as selection, propagation, and watering, the guide contains advice on using creative containers for artful arrangements. An alphabetically arranged directory of 250 houseplants forms the heart of the book, and the section is filled with enticing color photographs and concise cultural descriptions of plant attributes and requirements. In all, this is an indispensable guide for every level of expertise. Carol Haggas
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Customer Reviews

Over three hundred color photos to compliment plant lists and tips5

If you are seeking a single volume guide to houseplants, take a look at Valerie Bradley's The Complete Guide to Houseplants: it packs in details on all kinds of plants, including over three hundred color photos to compliment plant lists and tips. Care instructions include details on humidity, soil, watering and sun while ideas for propagation and descriptions of attributes help homeowners chose the right houseplant.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Be your own Horticulturist!5
I enjoy this very good informative read, I love the glossy bold pictures, I love the way the author made you feel like she was talking to you in person, I have over twenty five different plants and after reading this book I could go into the floral business,just kidding, this is one really great detail informative book, She tells you about the plant in three areas: Detail about plant, Caring for the plants and making new plants, what more could you want,just buy the book!

The artistic photographer held sway...text is OK.3
I've been trying to find a good comprehensive book on indoor plants that is at least the equal of my old standby, Foliage Plants for Decorating Indoors by Mr. and Mrs. Elberts (1989, Timber Press)[q.v.]. That book gives info on each plant from the direct knowledge of the authors and as a result has proved to be the best tropical houseplant book bar none, thus far. They give personal observations, recommendations, etc. Whereas 19 out of 20 such books have the usual set of short paragraphs with pedestrian info (i.e. dimensions, temperatures, light requirements, etc.). The Elberts also cover a goodly number of varieties and cultivars one is likely to encounter.

The present book here reviewed is one of those afore-mentioned 19. Admittedly, if you are into artistically sublime photography of plants this is the book for you!; although from a horticultural standpoint, sometimes the photos are too close to the plant, so that one cannot get a very good idea of what the plant as a whole looks like. Often the flowers, or a few leaves, attractive though they are, fill the whole frame. The majority of these kinds of books at least have good, illustrative photos of the species; as a whole plant.

The text, as said, is run-of-the-mill. Nothing beyond what you'll get in just about any book you find on indoor plants. Very few mentions of the varieties either. This is Reader's Digest's most recent tome of this subject (2006), apparently the successor to their 1997 book by Courtier and Clarke. It is not an improvement, mainly because of the photos. The 1997 book actually has pretty good illustrations of the WHOLE plant and really much better text with some inkling of personal opinion and sharing of personal experience. I'd rather have it than this thing.