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4 Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Truly a book for all readers!,
By Jane Ram (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gardens of Persia (Hardcover)
This book comes close to being all things to all readers. And if you don't feel like reading, you can simply enjoy the generous spread of illustrations -- maps, drawings and diagrams, beautifully reproduced Persian miniatures and above all the superb photographs by Jerry Harpur, a longtime specialist in capturing gardens and plants all over the world on film.
This is much more than a picture book: the name guarantees a literate and enlightening read. This book is not about gardening in the usual sense of how to grow certain plants in particular places at specific seasons: it covers the role of gardens in the social history of thousands of years of culture. But if you have a bare terrace or balcony, you will still find more than a little incidental inspiration in these pages. This book is a vast work of research, but it remains on a human level. Armchair travelers will enjoy the rare opportunity to learn more about what is perhaps one of today's least known cultural regions. Even philosophers will find food for thought in some of the quotations from Persian and Western writers: "The real gardens and flowers are within, they are in man's heart, not outside." (Rumi The Masnavi Book IV)
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
BEAUTIFUL!!!,
By John Sugawich (New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gardens of Persia (Hardcover)
Once again Penelope Hobhouse combines her peerless practical knowledge of plants with a passion for research and a love of garden history. In Gardens of Persia, she follows their evolution, from attempts to embody a vision of paradise to contemporary expressions of wealth and power. In all these spaces, with their distinctive template combining subtropical plants, buildings, and water, she finds that initial and powerful spiritual impulse always present, even where the imperatives of the world seem, on the surface, to be the motivation. The book is a beautiful production, with 150 specially commissioned photographs by Jerry Harpur, and a wealth of archival images and plans.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Surprisingly good book,
By Reader "kkbs" (Germany) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gardens of Persia (Hardcover)
As I am certainly not a gardening enthusiast, I was positively surprised by this amazing book. It is setting its topic into the (long Persian) historical background, draws interesting conclusion between Persian and Western gardens, and is simply a good read.
A special mention should be given to the nice photos and, in particular, the engravings, which give an impression of how the sites developped in the last centuries.
7 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointment,
By
This review is from: Gardens of Persia (Hardcover)
What a disappointment. Beautiful pictures of archaeological sites, architectural elements, desert scenery; pretty Persian miniatures, nice diagrams and drawings BUT where are the gardens? Oh, maybe after page 100 or so we start to see photos that actually look like the garden was the main focus of the picture. That's what I get for ordering books sight unseen, huh. I gave it a 2 because it was nice for what it was and because I lived in Iran in the late 70s and there were some nostalgic moments in it for me.
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Gardens of Persia by Penelope Hobhouse (Hardcover - February 17, 2004)
$49.95 $45.65
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