Feng Shui for Gardens
|
| Price: |
39 new or used available from $0.36
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #131120 in Books
- Published on: 2000-12-19
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 224 pages
Customer Reviews
WONDER BOOK
This is the best book ever. Very comprehensive, it works like a reference book. CLearly illustrated, so well organized and explained, it's the perfect gift for someone you care for. The feng shui in it really works. Since discovering feng shui through Lillian, our lives have changed so tremendously for the better, me and my husband just want to know more.
A truly stunning GARDEN book
I have to say this is my first reading of a feng shui book.And I am completely delighted and charmed by the subject and by Lillian Too's wonderful low key approach to the subject... there was simply so much in this book .. all her suggestions are practical and makes sense ... the book is also very readable !!
Completely impractical for most gardeners.
If you just bought yourself a big empty lot and will be designing and building your house and garden, this is the perfect book for you. For the rest of us with small, non-rectangular lots and existing houses, this book is useless.
I've never understood why so many people have a hard time understanding feng shui, but reading this book illuminated me. My interest in feng shui comes from Karen Rauch Carter and Terah Kathryn Collins, both of whom take ancient philosophies and practically and usefully apply them to Western culture. Lillian Too's feng shui seems to me to be so rigid as to be impossible for the majority of us to implement.
For example, this book advises that water elements (ponds, fountains) should go on the north side of your property. Well, that's not where I want (or have room) for my fountain. I want a fountain--where else can I put it? This book doesn't say, leaving me with the impression I'm courting feng shui disaster to place a fountain anywhere else in my yard.
This book also advises that palm trees, because of their height and the shape of their leaves, are dangerous to have anywhere around your home. As a Southern Californian, I find this very hard to believe. I also don't care for the assertion that cacti and other desert plants are dry and "dead" and therefore bad to have in my garden. Am I supposed to purchase only those plants that grow in China, regardless of my own climate and soil conditions?
I had hoped to obtain some sound advice to help me design my garden, but this book is filled with inflexible dictates rather than helpful guidelines. There aren't many feng shui gardening books out there, but I'll wait for a good one to be published. I got my money back for this one.



