The Unexpected Houseplant: 220 Extraordinary Choices for Every Spot in Your Home
The Unexpected Houseplant: 220 Extraordinary Choices for Every Spot in Your Home book cover

The Unexpected Houseplant: 220 Extraordinary Choices for Every Spot in Your Home

Kindle Edition

Price
$11.99
Publisher
Timber Press
Publication Date

Description

“Will boost the confidence of even the most black-thumbed houseplant owner. Martin’s can-do enthusiasm is infectious, her creativity inspiring.” — Booklist “An imaginative guide to bringing the delights of the garden indoors.” — Publishers Weekly “All indoor plant hobbyists in every geographic area will enjoy and learn from this book. Its fresh approach deserves a thumbs-up.” — Library Journal “[Martin] has a witty, creative voice that warms her new book.” — Traditional Home “Tovah Martin’s newest book is no dry encyclopedic volume: Her personal, engaging writing style is as entertaining as it is informative.” — Country Gardens “As the air gets crisper outside, it’s time to rethink what plants can do to enliven our interior spaces. Tips on how to care for ordinary and not-so-ordinary species are revealed, so non-green-thumbers need not fear.” — Design New England “This book engenders so much enthusiasm for indoor flora that you can find yourself outdoors with a shovel in your hand robbing your own garden of plants to bring inside.” — Gardenista “This isn’t just another book on houseplants; it’s an invitation to adventure.” — Horticulture “Martin writes in a captivatingly personal way…It’s Martin’s exuberance and deep knowledge that’ll keep you reading.” — Seattle Times “Martin’s book makes one look very differently at the whole houseplant phenomenon. It isn’t so much a practical guide…as a challenge to think outside the box when trying to bring the outside inside.” — Daily Hampshire Gazette “As the air gets crisper outside, it’s time to rethink what plants can do to enliven our interior spaces. Tips on how to care for ordinary and not-so-ordinary species are revealed, so non-green thumbers need not fear…Refreshing in the world of garden books.” — Philadelphia Inquire “A good book for plant geeks and anyone tired of the same old peace lilies.” — Harrisburg Patriot-News “A smart, stylish book on indoor gardening.” — Pacific Horticulture --This text refers to the paperback edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Introduction From the road, it looks like any other house. For anyone tooling through town, my home doesn’t really stand out, except perhaps for its preponderance of garden beds visible from the street and the fact that it’s a tad funkier than the neighboring New England architecture in the center of town. Especially in winter, you’d be prone to roll right on by without giving it so much as a second glance. But if you had reason to nose into the driveway, knock on the front door, and slip inside, it would be a whole different story. xa0 Basically, if you don’t like plants, don’t bother to enter. Agoraphobics will be just as agri-challenged inside as they are in the field. Because within that unassuming exterior resides a wonderful world of roaming vines and hairy stems. Leaves of all shapes, sizes, textures, scents, and combinations of colors are given free rein. You must brush by them to deliver the FedEx box. It’s necessary to engage with the flower spike of the pregnant onion before gaining entry into the converted barn, where the comfy chair awaits. Watch how you angle the groceries around the kalanchoe, because clumsily maneuvered baggage will bring it down. Only dogs with short tails are allowed in. Wherever it is possible to host plants, my house is wall-to-wall greenery. I didn’t bother doing much with decorator colors on the walls; I didn’t sweat the window treatments or the framed family portraits—the plants are my decor. At any given moment, I host hundreds of houseplants, give or take a couple of dozen. In autumn, the inventory might swell when I crowd more plants inside than the light venues can comfortably host. In winter, the amaryllis and other holiday cheerfuls hold forth. In spring, the accumulation swells with seedlings that are destined for outdoors. For a few brief months in the depths of summer, the head count decreases while the majority of my indoor plants sojourn outside. But I keep many succulents and all my terrariums close by because the home feels empty without their green presence. I can’t live without the jungle of leafy branches and groping vines that I call home. And it’s not as though I don’t have green elsewhere in my life. I garden intensively and extensively outdoors in summer. Every weekend, I hop in the car and visit gardens. Then I spend the rest of the year with the enviable job of writing about summer gardens. But I still couldn’t live without plants sharing my abode. For me it’s all about the plants stretching their limbs, forming their buds, expanding new leaves, and responding to my nurturing (or neglect, if called for). And that sensation—that intimacy with nature—is what I strive to describe in this book. If nothing else, this is the chronicle of a romance between botany and a kid who craves green. But under that thin veneer is an ill-concealed attempt to convert you. I’m hoping you’ll buy into this. I’m doing my best to demonstrate how plants can change your psyche when you welcome them into your life. It’s radical. It’s the difference between holding nature at arm’s length and embracing it into the heart of your home. But don’t take my word for it—give plants a chance. Live intimately with them. Let them connect. Experience their cycles and rhythms. Flow them into your agenda. Encourage those tendrils to meander into your everyday experience so they’re inextricably woven into your life. Do it with all the style, creativity, and devotion that you lavish on the other aspects of your life. Do it with the fervor you pour on your pets, for example, and you could end up starting a sweet relationship. Here, in the pages that follow, are the tools you’ll need to achieve your in-house botanical bond. --This text refers to the paperback edition. This isn’t your grandmother’s houseplant book. Renowned expert Tovah Martin thinks it’s time we dusted off houseplants, updated their image, and discovered just how exciting, rewarding, current, and crucial plants can be in our experience of home.xa0Picture brilliant spring bulbs by your bed, lush perennials brought in from the garden, quirky succulents in the kitchen, even flowering vines and small trees growing beside your easy chair. You’ll learn about all these plants and more, including placement, watering, feeding, grooming, pruning, and troubleshooting. Comprehensive, up-to-the-minute, and engagingly personal, The Unexpected Houseplant is for beginners, practiced green thumbs, and anyone who wants to infuse a bit of green into their décor. So join the indoor-gardening revolution—where plants and people intertwine and live happily ever after. --This text refers to the paperback edition. Tovah Martin is a fanatical and passionate organic gardener and the author of The Indestructible Houseplant , The Unexpected Houseplant , The New Terrarium , and Tasha Tudor’s Garden , as well as many other gardening books. Visit her tovahmartin.com. --This text refers to the paperback edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “An imaginative guide to bringing the delights of the garden indoors.” —
  • Publishers Weekly
  • The Unexpected Houseplant
  • , by renowned plant authority Tovah Martin, offers a revolutionary approach to houseplants. Instead of the typical varieties, Martin suggests hundreds of creative choices—brilliant spring bulbs, lush perennials brought in from the garden, quirky succulents, and flowering vines and small trees. Along with loads of visual inspiration, you will learn how to make unusual selections, where to best position plants in the home, and valuable tips on watering, feeding, and pruning.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(135)
★★★★
25%
(56)
★★★
15%
(34)
★★
7%
(16)
-7%
(-16)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Fun Ruminations On Unexpected Genera

A good book, if I don't feel like the target audience. I'm not an outdoor gardener looking to liven chilly months with overwintered outdoor plants. As a cramped apartment dweller, none of my plants can get a summer break outdoors, and Tovah's admonishment that no one needs grow lights just isn't the case with only northern windows. Nevertheless, some of her suggestions will do well with a northwestern window and some aggressive pruning to combat etoilation, from prior experience.

Moreso than a guide to particular plants, however, this book is a guide to how to get houseplants to work for you. From my own experience, you really do need to -love- your plants to make them live. My finicky maidenhairs are resplendent with fronds, and the temperamental tropicals are taking over, but the humdrum, basic begonia has only two leaves, and the "can you take care of this for me until I can take it back -- (five years later it's still here)" Aloe is going brown. Tovah also explains her particular situation, and repeats it often - cold, dim winters, and summers outdoors. And this is important - as she highlights - because you really need to know your home's environment to know what plants to keep (and where).

My own thoughts have never jived with the "disposable houseplant" ideology, as best evidenced by some hyacinth I forced in February that is still in my kitchen (why cut down the leaves if it's still growing?). But she makes a good case for growing some plants I've always wanted indoors, even though I have no outdoors they can head to after that.

There's a decent focus on flowers, which I can't do because of allergic-to-everything housemates, in case that is also your situation, be forewarned. Of course, flowers are the big attention-grabbers in any garden, so it makes sense.

Of the "plants that are sold as houseplants" expect to see few of the "easy care" options, but of course, that's kind of the point-- dracaenas are never unexpected. Many are the notoriously difficult: gardenias, jasmines, calatheas and croton get mentions, but the easy-for-any-conditions-plants are mostly pepperomias, bromiliads and sanseviera. Admittedly, quite a few of the plants are still easy, but they are usually sold for outdoor purposes, or mail-order-only exotics.

There's a bit about basic care near the end, and it's decent. She is the sort who keeps everything organic - pesticides, dirt, etc. So don't expect tables about which chemical for what pest or whathaveyou.

As for my critiques: well, as mentioned earlier, this book seems to -expect- a house to work with. Since she keeps few plants indoors for the summer, many of her choices would be exceedingly impermanent in dim indoor lighting. She wants you to have an eastern- or western- exposure (or maybe south). Since she doesn't run much heat, she seems to underestimate how much some plants need humidity that they just won't get in the average home. All the photos, though beautiful, look staged. I want to see where the plant grows day-in and day-out, so that I can judge the light it's getting versus what I can give it.

Other than those modest complaints, the book is fun funny, and maybe it can light a passion in your heart to try houseplants again!
25 people found this helpful
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New ideas and inspiration

I was delighted with Tovah Martin's book for several reasons. Of course the illustrations are both lovely and practical. The photography both sets off the plants and shows realistically how a plant can be placed in the home. There are a number of plants that I have grown, but the book gave me both hints for their care and new ideas.

What I like best about the book its this: Martin's plants are real! obviously she knows how to bring out the best in a plant. But her specimens are definitely not the typical overlush, over fertilized, over pruned, root bound house plants plants bought in floral shops, nurseries, and big stores. They are real. Now that I have read her book, I don't have to feel inferior because my beloved plants do not look like magazine illustrations. They are happy and healthy and natural looking, as Martin's plants are.

The book also inspired me to try some plants that I have not grown before--including some not in the book! Why not! If bulbs can be forced indoors during winter, then some vines or woodland plants might be just the thing for a bare space or a low-lit corner of the house. A good book inspires you not only with what is in it, but with what your mind can do with the ideas it germinates.
Martin's use of different pot shapes is delightful, and I will certainly vary some pots now, although I try to keep to a strict color scheme for the pots.

Her arrangement of plants by season is unusual and helpful in a new way. But, understand, that you won't find the usual index of plants that like sun, like dry, etc. The information is all in the descriptions of the plant, but you'll need to read the text to discover it.

Finally, the prose is lovely. Martin is enthusiastic and lyrical about her plants. The information for growing them is embedded in the charm of her descriptions. I enjoyed her writing on both the level of helpful text and beautiful writing about a subject dear to her.

I would not recommend this book for the conventional basic how-to plant guide. But I strongly recommend it as a beautiful addition to a nicely stocked library on plants and gardening for a fresh and helpful guide providing new ideas.
9 people found this helpful
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A great indoor gardening book

This is an excellent read for any gardener. If you think you don't like houseplants you need to read this book. Ms Martin covers some typical houseplants but not all of the common ones. She does inspire you to try some plants indoors you may not have considered using as houseplants, such as tender evergreens and ornamental grasses. There are brief care tips at the end of each species covered but the book isn't a detailed houseplant care book. If you are a beginning gardener with basic houseplant questions this may not be the book you are looking for. But if you are a gardener all seasons of the year and enjoy reading about someone's experiences with and thoughts on plants and need some inspiration to create a beautiful indoor garden, read this book.
4 people found this helpful
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An upbeat read with great pictures: Inspirational!

I would recommend this book to anyone just starting out and unsure of which direction to go, as well as the more experienced gardener. Her passion for plants shines through on every page.
1 people found this helpful
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I enjoyed this book.

I was looking for different kinds of plants that I could incorporate into my plant collection. It has a lot of beautiful ideas.
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Easygoing style with lots of great information.

I love this book because it takes you through all four seasons of living with a huge variety of plants. Tovah invites the reader into her life while giving them reliable information about living with houseplants that are outside the expected genera. I only wish I thought to start jotting down the ones I really liked at the beginning of the book. There are too many to remember! I like it so well I bought another of her books.
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Houseplants beyond philodendron; when you’re ready to bang with the big boys

I have read several of Her books and this is another winner. She writes so well and really captures what creating and maintaining an indoor garden is like with all its joys and pitfalls. As usual, there are a lot of great ideas, so much useful info and many new fabulous plants.
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Excellent info and a very enjoyable read

This book made me reevaluate my current houseplant collection and gave me several ideas for changes that will make it even better, most using things I already have.
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Three Stars

good information and beautiful photos; sometimes irritating prose
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Food for Your Creative Mind

This is an incredible book! Loved it!!! So many great ideas about how to incorporate different houseplants into your interior space. I especially enjoyed the author's utilization of unique and sculptural planters. Plastic pots for plants are so boring. This book will have you bringing outdoor urns and ceramics indoors. She also recycles and repurposed without making a big production. Food for a creative mind!