The Landscape Design Book Shelf

Essential Landscape - Garden Design Books; New and Tried-and-True Favorites

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Jacket_Lerner_Book - ©Georgene A Bramlage_2006
Jacket_Lerner_Book - ©Georgene A Bramlage_2006
Here are some of my favorite basic books about landscape and garden design that have prominent places on my bookshelf. I reach for them first.

These books form the core of my basic landscape-garden design bookshelf. They are my favorites and even though some are tried-and-true favorites, others are newer and more innovative. They are outstanding and I usually reach for them first.

  • Design for Gardens by Joseph Hudak is more than a garden design book. Form, function, and design are winning attributes of this landscape design book. American gardeners, especially, will appreciate designs suitable for all sizes of pocketbooks.

  • Anyone Can Landscape! by Joel M. Lerner is one of the few good books that provide landscaping basics in an easy-to-read and -understand arrangement. This book is ideal for homeowners of all skill levels as well as professionals wanting to review basics.

  • The Well-Designed Mixed Garden: Building Beds and Borders with Trees, Shrubs, Perennials, Annuals and Bulbs by Tracy DiSabato-Aust does a fine job of presenting ideas on how to combine plant elements to yield a unified whole.

  • Dirr's Hardy Trees and Shrubs: An Illustrated Encyclopedia by Michael A. Dirr is a good book about temperate trees and shrubs for those who need the security of photographs in a manual. Instructive and crisp photographs are from the author's vast collection of his own work.

  • Dirr's Trees and Shrubs for Warm Climates: An Illustrated Encyclopedia by Michael A. Dirr is a companion manual to Dirr's "Hardy Trees and Shrubs." This is a welcome volume for landscape professionals as well as for homeowners living and working in warmer climates.

  • Armitage's Garden Perennials: A Color Encyclopedia by Allan M. Armitage is the companion volume to "Herbaceous Perennial Plants" for those wanting and needing identifying color photographs.

  • Armitage's Manual of Annuals, Biennials, and Half-Hardy Perennials by Allan M. Armitage is a very welcome manual for temperate climate landscape designers and home gardeners. Armitage provides identification tips as well as cultural information. This is a great addition to the bookshelf for those interested in container gardens and filling up space with color.
©

Text and photograph by Georgene A. Bramlage, October 2006. Reproduction without permission prohibited.

Georgene A. Bramlage, The Wallace Agency, Roanoke, VA

Georgene A. Bramlage - Suite 101 Landscaping Feature Writer and Topic Editor Free-lance Garden and Landscape Writer and Consultant

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Comments

Nov 6, 2006 5:23 AM
Robert Dailey :
Georgene:
Just read your list of landscaping books. Thanks. I'm going to put some of these on my Christmas wish list. b
Nov 6, 2006 7:14 AM
Georgene A. Bramlage :
Glad the list was of use to you :)Thanks!

I'll be posting another list soon of newer and in some cases more specialized titles for landscaping.

I do believe in "back-to-the-basics" when it comes to landscape design :)

Cercis
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