cover image Creative Vegetable Gardening: Accenting Your Vegetables with Flowers

Creative Vegetable Gardening: Accenting Your Vegetables with Flowers

Joy Larkcom. Abbeville Press, $35 (208pp) ISBN 978-0-7892-0352-6

It's no longer sufficient to have vegetables marching in tidy military rows through plots reserved for only edibles. British garden writer Larkcom suggests ways to enliven vegetable gardens by adding flowers, arches, arbors or free-standing decorative items. Beginning with a brief overview of the potager, the centuries-old concept of vegetable gardening in France, she moves from vast elegantly designed gardens to the practical, with photos of British gardens she knows. Elements of design and siting are explained and beautifully illustrated in sufficient detail for even novice gardeners who want to embellish their vegetable patches with colorful unexpected elements. Taking on all details, from myriad variations on fencing, edging and garden paths to the multiple color and texture diversity of various lettuces, spinaches and other greens, Larkcom also offers a comprehensive alphabetical directory of vegetables (including little-known varieties). While Larkcom's prose is enthusiastic and exact, the book's appeal is limited to gardening zones with climates similar to England's. Gardeners in other regions may find that recommended plants don't thrive as hoped or that the companion plantings will not combine as expected. (June)