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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Reference Source!
Between 1919 and 1923, a landmark publication in four volumes, The Cactaceae, was published by the Carnegie Institution. It remains a landmark publication in the world's literature on cacti. Edward F. Anderson has produced a massive one volume encyclopedic work, which expands and extends the work of Carnegie Institution. This marvelous resource has been well worth waiting...
Published on December 19, 2003 by Frat Ēng

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10 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The Cactus Family
The Cactus Family

This book was a big disappointment to me. I paid the high price because it said it had growing information about the different cacti. In fact, it only had a general growing chapter that gives overall information instead of information for the individual cactus. I needed to know growing information such as light, temperature, moisture, and...
Published on August 15, 2008 by Carolyn R


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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Reference Source!, December 19, 2003
This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
Between 1919 and 1923, a landmark publication in four volumes, The Cactaceae, was published by the Carnegie Institution. It remains a landmark publication in the world's literature on cacti. Edward F. Anderson has produced a massive one volume encyclopedic work, which expands and extends the work of Carnegie Institution. This marvelous resource has been well worth waiting for as it is based on Anderson's forty-five years of research on cacti.

The unique attributes of cacti are discussed in five chapters. Cacti occur naturally and are native to what is called "The New World." Only one species of native cacti is found in tropical Africa. In all other countries of the world where cacti are present, their existence is owed to the early explorers who carried cacti back to Europe on their ships and to birds that dispersed cactus seeds throughout the world.

Cacti as food, both for humans and animals, is addressed along with the medicinal uses of cacti. Cacti have long been used for ceremonial and religious purposes by indigenous peoples of the New World and as a source of dyes, especially the beautiful red cochineal dye. A chapter on cacti cultivation has been contributed by Roger Brown. For those interested in growing cacti in their homes and gardens, Brown's advice on containers, potting and repotting, air circulation and ventilation, pests, pesticides, and propagation is a valuable bonus to this specialized encyclopedia.

Pages 105 through 681 contain over 1,000 stunning color photographs (many photographed by Anderson), which are overwhelming in their portrayal of both the beauty and the idiosyncratic nature of cacti. Examples of the photographic artistry found within these glossy pages range from close-up snapshots of cactus flowers and large photographs of intriguing oddities. It will be difficult for cacti enthusiasts to wean themselves from this prodigious book, which weighs almost ten pounds.

The appendices, glossary and indexes are superb. The eight-page double-column international bibliography is comprehensive, spanning over two centuries of research on cacti (the earliest citation is dated 1760 and the latest references are from 2001). This is truly a state-of-the-art source. This splendid work stands alone and at the top of its genre.

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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dr Anderson - Where have you been all my Life?, June 30, 2001
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This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
This is the ultimate book for any serious cactus collector and grower. Although at first glance it seems daunting in the extreme, a sudden epiphany of understanding dawns as one reads through the book. Written by a scientist and true enthusiast, this book is exhaustive in its desctriptions and naming of cacti, even to the point of honesty, when Dr Anderson explains that many families of cacti are less well understood than others. This book has many scientific and true botanical references in it, but unlike many authors who believe (wrongly) that the reader will possess the same knowledge, Dr Anderson explains all this in great detail at the beginning of the book, with all the nomenclatures the reader and enthusiast is going to be encountering in later chapters. The photographs are stunning and comprehensive, the various different habitat each plant grows in is described, and the very important issue of conservation of valuable species is tackled in a topical and masterful manner. The exact care of each and every plant is not displayed together with its photograph, but at the beginning of the book, and all other aspects of care, from soil, sterilisation of tools, pots, eradication of pests and so on, can also be found there. The very simple but concise drawings of the anatomy of the cactus flower in general are wonderfully understandable, and in the later photgraphic section, any doubts the grower may have about a particular cactus are dispelled by the flower description, from stem to size and colour. There is also a glossary of botanical terms at the end of the book, so there is never a section in the book where the reader is blinded by scientific jargon. I would recommend this book to any seriously interested collector of cacti - the definitive book, in my opinion.
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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A New Starting Point for Cactus Taxonomy, March 28, 2001
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This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
Edward Anderson has produced a magnum opus from over forty years of research on almost all aspects of Cactaceae. The last thorough attempt to classify all cacti was completed in 1923 by Britton and Rose and is mainly useful now for locality information and as a snapshot of taxonomic thinking of the early 20th century.

Anderson is an expert on cactus ethnobotany and devotes one chapter to how various cultures use cacti for building materials, a source for psychoactive drugs and food, among mnay other uses. A brief section on how to grow cacti by Roger Brown contains valuable tips for beginners but this is not a beginners book. Anderson's most sweeping contribution is a complete revision to the genus Opuntia, based on traditional taxonomy as well as recent DNA and chromosome information.

The Cactus Family is well-illustrated with hundreds of color photographs and most of the cacti are shown in flower. Maps are provided for countries in North and South America but no distribution of the genera described is provided, information that is available elsewhere but not in one reliable source. Anderson humbly admits that cactus taxonomy will never be truly complete and he does focus on the genus and species levels, ignoring the Augean task of defining most varieties and subspecies.

All in all, I highly recommed The Cactus Family to any academic, public or botanical library and to any serious cactus hobbyist as well. Anderson's work will likely be the standard reference for many years to come, providing professional and amateur researchers a solid foundation to base more detailed examinations of individual genera and species.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars WOW!!! Cactus lover's new bible., July 9, 2001
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This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
Fuggedaboutit! This recently published work is quite simply the greatest single volume treatment of the Cactus family. Although expensive, I believe you will treasure this book in much the same way that you treasure your cacti collection. A wealth of knowledge expressed in terms a non-scientist can understand, yet also greatly useful to the serious scholar. Please read the other reviews. Much enthusiasm.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I CANNOT SAY ENOUGH GOOD ABOUT THIS WORK, July 31, 2006
This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
I can start with the old line "I I had only one book on cacti....." Well, this would certainly be the one. I spend a great amount of time traveling and photographing flowering and interesting plants, cactus being among them. I also collect this type of plant. I have found this work to be almost absolutely necessary for identification purposes and it certainly enhances by hobby of collecting and attempting to raise. As one reviewer points out, this is not a simple book of pretty plants. This is the real thing. There is absolutely a wealth of information here. I never travel area where cacti grow without it. The text is quite readable. There are indeed many, many wonderful color plates. It makes by hobby much more interesting and enjoyable. Recommend this one highly.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply the Best, October 27, 2004
This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
Where do you start with a book of this magnitude? (well I had to borrow a review copy from an editor friend of mine, unfortunately he wanted it back). The author a Senior Research Botanist spent most of his lifetime amassing the information that forms this book and then sadly died only two weeks after publication. This is a book for the serious hobbyist. If you are looking for nice photographs of plants in pots, this is probably not the book for you. Having said that there are enough photographs in this book to satisfy even the most avid plant spotter (1016 colour plates.) "Is this plant an Acanthocalycium or an Echinopsis?" This book will give you the answer. In one form or another the book covers most of the Cactaceae family. It is certainly one of the first books to use the nomenclature of the IOS Consensus group. This is a big book 776 pages, "Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed and some few to be chewed and digested" Francis Bacon 1561-1625. This book certainly falls into the latter category and it is a great shame that the author is not with us to take the acclaim he surely deserved, but what a legacy he has left. I would love to own this book and it will be one of the first things I order from Amazon after I've sorted everyone elses Christmas presents out.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Profusely illustrated with color photography, May 19, 2001
This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
Edward Anderson is senior research botanist at the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix, Arizona and 1998 winner of the prestigious Cactus d"or, given by the Principality of Monaco for outstanding research on succulents. In The Cactus Family, Anderson draws upon his many years of experience and expertise to create the definitive compendium on Cactus. An essential, core, "user friendly" title for personal, professional, and academic horticultural and gardening reference collections, The Cactus Family is profusely illustrated with color photography. Additionally, The Cactus Family is enhanced with an informative foreword by Wilhelm Barthlott; a chapter on cactus cultivation by Roger Brown; an appendices of maps; a second appendices "Two Botanic Gardens and Herbaria with Significant Collections of Cacti; a glossary; literature citation; an index of scientific names, and an index of common names.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent reference for those avid in the hobby of cacti, August 30, 2004
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Ondy (Los Angeles) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
This book is a comprehensive reference of cacti. It contains desciptions of most all the species within each genus. It also has a fairly a good section in the front of the book about the origins and botany of cacti. There are pictures for about half of the listings, though because this is more of reference books they are relatively small. Also very helpful, each listing has the previous or other accepted botanical names for each species.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book for Cacti lovers!!!, October 24, 2008
This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
I bought this book for my father as a gift. He is a collector of nearly 5,000 different species of Cacti & succulents plants. This book is a comprehensive reference of cacti. This is considered the 'Bible' for cactus collectors and researchers alike. Well worth the money for the information and photos. The main section The Cacti lists the plants alphabetically by Genera and then species. Each Genera has a general introduction discussing its characteristics, habitat, taxonomy and discovery.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Splendid - comprehensive, June 21, 2008
This review is from: The Cactus Family (Hardcover)
"The Cactus Family" is a handsome and impressive publication which lists 1810 species of cacti. The first chapter, Distinctive Features of Cacti, considers what identifies the cactus. Chapter Two: Ethnobotany of Cacti, describes the various practical, religious and recreational uses of a number of cacti. Chapter Three considers the Conservation of Cacti and Chapter Four, the Cultivation of Cacti. Chapter Five discusses the Classification of Cacti. The alphabetically listing the The Cacti commences on page 105 and runs to page 681. The book concludes with Appendix One: MAPS, and Appendix Two: Botanic Gardens and Herbaria with Significant Collections of Cacti; a Glossary; Literature Cited; Index of Scientific Names and Index of Common Names.

The main section The Cacti lists the plants alphabetically by Genera and then species. Each Genera has a general introduction discussing its characteristics, habitat, taxonomy and discovery. The listing for each species includes its date of finding, common names and synonyms, a botanical description and additional relevant information such as comments regarding variation, uses or habitat. Many of the species are illustrated with the illustrations appearing on the same page spread, the majority seem to be of plants in their habitat. The size of the illustrations varies from about 5cm x 8cm (2" x 3") up to half-page. There are over 1,000 colour photographs in The Cacti section in addition to the many photographs of cacti and their associations in the other chapters.

The presentation is excellent, it is well laid out and the typography adds much to the clarity and understanding of the information; the result is a page which looks appealing and invites reading. The introductory chapters make interesting and informative reading. I was a little surprised that the chapter on cultivation is somewhat brief and prescriptive, and that it does not consider different growing environments enthusiasts have to contend with or availability of materials which must inevitably apply locally; it is nonetheless informative.

The obvious up to date comparison for "The Cactus Family" must be "The New Cactus Lexicon" complied and edited by members of the International Cactaceae Systematics Group. While the latter two volume work does not pretend to be more than a descriptive list of cacti, their being nothing to compare with the first five chapters of "the Cactus Family" it does boast more than twice the number of illustrations, again mostly in habitat. The two publications do not agree 100%; "The New Cactus Lexicon" lists 124 Genera, 1816 species, "The Cactus Family" 125 Genera and 1810 species; and the difference is probably greater as the latter lists some as a separate species which the former considers merely as a form of one variable species. However "The Cactus Family" is the more accessible and certainly the better typographically, "The New Cactus Lexicon" text pages are unappealing and confusing by comparison.

On its own or in comparison, this is a splendid tome and indispensable for any serious collector.
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The Cactus Family
The Cactus Family by Edward F. Anderson (Hardcover - March 16, 2001)
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