Hedonista wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2024 8:13 pm
As far as the books you’ve talked about, which would you recommend someone keep an eye out for? I already have The Savage Garden and Adrian Slack’s Carnivorous Plants, but I’m always interested in expanding my library. I’m a visual learner, so I prefer lots of pictures, but I know that can be tough to come by in books from the 70s/80s. Clear photos, at any rate.
That's a good question. For cultivation advice,
The Savage Garden (1998 and 2013) would be my pick, particularly for US growers (2nd edition is slightly better). Slack's
Insect-eating plants and how to grow them (1988) might work better for UK growers, but bear in mind that it was older. Slack's got good pics but there are more in
Savage Garden. Incidentally, if you want but can't find Slack's book, it was republished in 2006 as
Insect eaters - same text but some of the photos are quite small. Another good book for cultivation advice from the UK is
Carnivorous Plants: Gardening with Extraordinary Botanicals (2016) by Nigel Hewitt-Cooper, but it's harder to get here in the US (I read the kindle version).
For books that are more like field guides but still have good cultivation advice and outstanding pictures, I think Schnell's
Carnivorous Plants of the United States and Canada is my favorite (the 2nd edition from 2002; the original was published in 1976 and is much shorter). Of course, the scope is limited, but I'm not as interested in
Nepenthes so it works for me. Also,
Pitcher Plants of the Americas (2006) by Stewart McPherson is very good. He's got a lot of different books but that's the only one I have. Slack's
Carnivorous Plants (1980) is okay but light on pics, especially color.
Since you mentioned photos I also want to mention Barry Rice's
Growing Carnivorous Plants (2006). He's an amazing photographer and approaches things a bit differently - he gives as much attention to
Utricularia as he does the other genera. I found the growing advice a bit basic, but for me it was still worth buying. And a very honorable mention for
Gardening with Carnivores: Sarracenia Pitcher Plants in Cultivation & in the Wild by Nick Romanowski (2002), which has great advice on starting your own CP nursery (or not!).
A couple that are really only worthwhile for collectors of CP books (I have a decent collection) is Pietropaolo's
The Carnivorous Plants of the World (1986) and the short
Carnivorous Plants by Gordon Cheers (1984). Both are out-of-date on growing advice and lighter on photos, but were early efforts for CP books. And while I'm at it, Darwin's
Insectivorous Plants (1875) and Lloyd's
The Carnivorous Plants (1942) are collector's items - buy them if you can get them at a good price, but don't expect exciting reading.
Anyway, that's my 2 cents (and probably WAY more than you wanted).