Random books from botanica's library
Stiff Upper Lip by Lawrence Durrell
Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann
Cintra Palacio Monserrate autentica fotografia
Site planning by Kevin Lynch
Hotel Guide: Great Britain and Ireland by Royal Automobile Club
Large gardens and parks : maintenance, management, and design by T. W. J. Wright
Members with botanica's books
Member connections
Friends: anaall, orientalist, siubhank, sonshi, tereasa, walshga
Interesting libraries: Beraketa, broughtonhouse, Casalima, florahistora, hfglen, iochroma, jkpdc, johannab66, kauders, kiwidoc, luxivoraine, Moranga, pknight, presto, rtsanjabi, rushwright, vaneska, WAAC23library
LibraryThing authors: Gerald Luckhurst (botanica), H. F. Glen (hfglen)
Member: botanica
CollectionsYour library (3,108)
Reviews17 reviews
Tagsgardening (580), plants (515), gardens (486), Portuguese (451), office (442), horticulture (330), fiction (264), Sintra (230), topography (229), Portugal (196) — see all tags
Cloudstag cloud, author cloud
GroupsBBC Radio 3 Listeners, História em português / History in portuguese, LibraryThing in Portuguese (Portugal)
Favorite bookstoresLivraria Esperança
About meLandscape Architect
http://jardimformoso.blogspot.com/
About my library
Optimistic that this exercise will finally sort out a very jumbled collection. (Moved far too many times, and with not enough shelves on which to rest.) Mostly plants, I suppose, but we'll have to see that when I get through it. An awful lot of manual entries!
Homepagehttp://gerald.luckhurst.googlepages.com/
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Real nameGerald
LocationSintra, Portugal
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Account typepublic, lifetime
Connection NewsConnection News
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/botanica (profile)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/botanica (library)
Common KnowledgeSeries (86), Awards (113), Characters (1285), Places (352)
Member sinceJun 10, 2007









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Aqui vai o endereço:
http://www.librarything.com/er/giveaway/...
Grande abraço,
Beto
posted by frizero at 7:13 pm (EST) on Sep 3, 2009
Sorry
Simon
posted by kauders at 2:04 pm (EST) on Jul 6, 2009
Yes we have had some warm weather here - but nothing yet like last summer when we had a period of 17 consecutive days when the daily maximum was above 35 decgrees.
Sintra is a beautiful place, though I have only been there once (many years ago), I still remember it.
As you are in Portugal, maybe you could help me with a library classification problem. I have a number of books written in various languages of the Iberian peninsula; and I know the dewey decimal numbers for books written in Portuguese, Catalan and Castillian/Spanish. However, I also have fiction works written in Gallego, Asturianu/Bable, Euskerra, and Aragonese. I am having trouble finding distinct dewey numbers for fiction written in those languages and don't want simply to bunch them together with Portugues (as in the case of Gallego) or Spanish (in the case of Asturianu and Aragonese); and, of course, Euskerra, should be in an absolutely separate category. Can you help me at all? Cheers, Lynn
posted by lynnarnold at 8:14 pm (EST) on Jan 22, 2009
posted by lynnarnold at 7:42 am (EST) on Jan 12, 2009
posted by sidrah at 6:02 am (EST) on Jan 4, 2009
posted by mensageiro at 10:48 pm (EST) on Jan 1, 2009
landscape architect Carl Th Soerensen (1893 -1979) he was called a "Landscape Modernist", and there is a book with that title written by Sven-Ingvar Andersson, Steen Høyer. I will look for one of your books, maybe the one about Sintra, - I did not reach it this time in Lisbon, but I surely will try once. Ulla
posted by SengaDew at 4:10 pm (EST) on Jul 7, 2008
posted by SengaDew at 4:19 am (EST) on Jul 6, 2008
All my gardening books have not yet reached LT, as they are big editions and buried in deep piles. I need a library room - perhaps my daughter's as she is 17 and ready to leave for University soon!!!
Is that your library? - it looks fabulous!
Cheers, Karen
posted by kiwidoc at 11:09 am (EST) on Apr 22, 2008
posted by sonshi at 12:07 am (EST) on Apr 22, 2008
Cheers,
Francesca
posted by francescadefreitas at 11:14 pm (EST) on Apr 17, 2008
posted by antisyzygy at 12:30 pm (EST) on Feb 5, 2008
posted by hfglen at 9:16 am (EST) on Dec 25, 2007
another book on the Mughals: The Mughal Gardens by Ferozsons (Pvt) Limited, Lahore. sorry forgot the author but it is a recent book - I would say this year.
Rabia
posted by rabiazafar78 at 11:55 am (EST) on Dec 3, 2007
Apologies for delay. I am now back in Egypt but will return to Turkey next March.There is a book on Ottoman gardens:
Gardens and Flowers in the Ottoman Culture by Nurthan Atusoy.
Hope you find this useful
Best regards
Orientalist
posted by orientalist at 6:42 am (EST) on Nov 29, 2007
Thanks for dropping by. Sorry it has taken me over two months to reply. You've inspired me - I really need to get the rest of my books on here.
cheers
Helen
(Australia)
posted by Platypus at 5:17 am (EST) on Nov 6, 2007
Thanks for dropping by. Sorry it has taken me over two months to reply. You've inspired me - I really need to get the rest of my books on here.
cheers
Helen
(Australia)
posted by Platypus at 5:00 am (EST) on Nov 6, 2007
This is a wonderful little Guide based on the winter silhouette, shape, branches, twigs, buds, etc. along with the range....delightful
posted by ghlibrary at 12:23 pm (EST) on Nov 3, 2007
posted by Moranga at 8:31 pm (EST) on Oct 8, 2007
Gerald? This was a surprise... I pictured you as a woman, Botanica! :-) What a laugh!
My Library is doing well... I don't have a 10th of your books! Again, your books are to die for!
posted by Moranga at 1:34 pm (EST) on Oct 7, 2007
posted by GardenLit at 11:44 pm (EST) on Oct 6, 2007
posted by kitchengardenbooks at 5:25 pm (EST) on Oct 6, 2007
If gardening is your thing, try "Greater Perfection' by Francis Cabot, which is a very pretty gardening book about developimg a garden in Quebec (although the gardening zone is different to yours)
If you like biography - try Boyhood and Youth by Coetzee. I really liked these two.
Cheers, Karen
posted by kiwidoc at 8:01 pm (EST) on Oct 4, 2007
it took me several days to return to LibraryThing and I apologize for my late reply to your comment.
Thanks for your friendly message. I do love Portugal and I am about to finish my Master's in Portuguese Literature. Besides, I appreciate Literature in English and I am a teacher of English as a Foreign Language here in Brazil. I would love to keep in contact and exchange some ideas about books and this lovely country you live in.
Where are you from, actually?
Best regards from your new Brazilian friend,
Beto
Robertson Frizero Barros
Porto ALegre - Brazil
posted by frizero at 8:04 am (EST) on Oct 4, 2007
thanks, yes I have a number of collections,postcards included.
U might want to check out the following link: Gardens of the Mughal Empire - mughalgardens.org/detect/getflash.html
Also there is a bibliography for Lahore Mughal Gardens (PDF format): http://mughalgardens.org/PDF/lahore_bibl...
Another book is: Karachi: Pleasure Gardens of a Raj City, Sang-e-Meel Publications, Pakistan, 2007 - www.sang-e-meel.com
The Dual City: Karachi during the Raj by Yasmeen Lari and Mihail S. Lari, Oxford University Press, 2001 - is an interesting background to the city. Also has architectural section - early colonial period to the 20th century (till 1947).
if I think of any more I will let u know.
rabia
Karachi
posted by rabiazafar78 at 7:13 am (EST) on Oct 4, 2007
posted by Arco-Iris at 9:16 am (EST) on Oct 2, 2007
The gardening books I read/used in New Zealand are, of course, completely different to those in British Columbia. Where I live is a virtual rain forest, so the plants grow like crazy but succumb to fungal disease and leaching problems. English garden books work well!
My latest botanical book to read was Anna Pavord and her book about tulips. I like her books as she has some writing flare also.
posted by kiwidoc at 11:59 am (EST) on Sep 30, 2007
Cheers
Karen
posted by kiwidoc at 7:37 pm (EST) on Sep 29, 2007
I was on the committee of the local numismatic society in Johannesburg for years before moving down here, and would collect mediaeval or Roman coins if time and funds permitted -- but one life is far too short to do all the interesting and useful things there are!
What's your e-mail? It's taking forever to post a message like this ...
h
posted by hfglen at 1:03 pm (EST) on Sep 25, 2007
posted by Antipodean at 7:15 pm (EST) on Sep 24, 2007
posted by Antipodean at 7:13 pm (EST) on Sep 24, 2007
I visited Sintra last year and loved it - lucky you! One of my best holiday memories ever is sitting in the little wine shop/bar up the tiny hilly street, being given plate after plate of fantastic ham, cheese, desserts, and the wine to go with them...
posted by wandering_star at 6:21 pm (EST) on Sep 23, 2007
posted by siubhank at 5:50 pm (EST) on Sep 22, 2007
My husband learned the Polish at home and at his grandparents, he's second generation Polish-American on both sides. He spent a semester of High School in Madrid for the Spanish. When he got to Notre Dame, he went into advanced Spanish and took French for three semesters, then switched to Portuguese, because a girl he was sweet on was taking it. He went to Texas for his master's and took Portuguese again, no sweetie this time! He then spent eighteen months in Korea with the U.S. Air Force and came home with a working knowledge of Korean, really helped when he took his shirts to a Korean Laundry :-) I've tried for thirty years to teach him "Southern" but he seems to be resistant to that dialect. He is now teaching Spanish and French to grades K through 8. I'm studying French in preparation for our trip to Provence in 2008. he 'helps' but mostly leaves me to my CDs. We do intersperse phrases in our daily conversation.
posted by siubhank at 1:13 pm (EST) on Sep 22, 2007
Your profile page is wonderful. I can navigate around the internet pretty well, but I can't do pictures like that.
I was in Sintra in June 2005! We loved it. We did the National Palace, all those steps. We're going to go back to Portugal soon. My husband speaks Portuguese (and French, Spanish, Polish and a bit of Korean. We stayed in Lisbon, just up the hill from the Baxia
area. We want to see the southern part next time
posted by siubhank at 10:51 am (EST) on Sep 22, 2007
Ever so many thanks
Hugh
posted by hfglen at 3:43 pm (EST) on Sep 21, 2007
Date palms: almost certainly yes. If they succumb, there's always Phoenix canariensis -- not as tasty, but people-proof (anything that can survive for decades on the centre reservation of a main road in Johannesburg just has to be TOUGH). Glad Lytton came up trumps -- he's a highly entertaining character, with a taste in puns that makes even me groan. Do please say hello from me if you contact him again.
Will look into Vaneska's library, possibly even adding it to my list of interesting ones as she's about 6th on my list of shared books.
All best
Hugh
posted by hfglen at 4:22 pm (EST) on Sep 20, 2007
In fact, Durban is closer to the equator than Funchal, and so warmer and wetter, but (strangely) with more hours of sunshine. At least, comparing BBC-Weather's account of Funchal with SA Weather Service's account of home. So I guess you have a better chance of succeeding with a bible garden than I have. Prof. Musselman's Bible Plants can be accessed bu asking Google for "Old Dominion University" AND Musselman -- it's then the 3rd reference that comes up.
Thinking on from Mimi Jardim's cookbook, is there one that celebrates the Portuguese ex-colonies at Goa and/or Macau?
All best
Hugh
posted by hfglen at 3:27 pm (EST) on Sep 19, 2007
Not only have I seen Ernst van Jaarsveld's book (admittedly, no closer than the unit library) but I know the lad and work for the same organization. He's at Kirstenbosch, and as helpful as the day is long.
All best
Hugh
posted by hfglen at 6:41 am (EST) on Sep 19, 2007
posted by claudiadias at 1:28 pm (EST) on Sep 18, 2007
posted by hfglen at 1:12 pm (EST) on Sep 18, 2007
Many thanks for adding me to your list of interesting libraries. i shall return the compliment in the next day or 2.
Reynolds' first edition is fairly rare, but I didn't think it was that rare! Maybe South Africans just haven't discovered LT.
Bible Gardens: I think out of those two I'd go for Hepper's 'Planting a Bible Garden', if only because it's a fuller account that the other one. Before I raise your hopes of usefulness too high (and even though I hold Nigel Hepper in high regard), honour bids me point out that Hepper's Bible garden is / was in Richmond, SW London. When I tried to establish a collection of Bible plants in Pretoria years ago, I found both his books less than perfectly useful. And haven't even tried here in Durban -- there are just too many exciting tropical plants here already!
As for Madeira? Sorry, I haven't a clue, never even having come close to visiting there.
BTW: Mimi Jardim's book is a gem, with lots of yummy Mozambican-Portuguese recipes that I remember seeing in LM when I was a kid. She has some Angolan recipes that look a bit rougher, but also well worth trying.
All best
Hugh
posted by hfglen at 1:04 pm (EST) on Sep 18, 2007
Yes, our libraries seem to overlap quite a bit, and are about the same size! Your photo even looks a lot like my library here in Compiègne. I have a house in Gozo, Malta, where I do my gardening. I have had it about 30 years and have big eucalyptus and palms grown from seed. The problem there is the salt wind from the sea, and the poor soil. I now have a gardener and as I am 80 do less work now! I must look further at your catalogue. I like the botanical garden in Palermo a lot, and I contributed some plants to the one in Naples which was ravaged during the war. Also the botanical garden in Tenerife..lots of good things.
Regards David
posted by poliphilus at 5:33 am (EST) on Sep 18, 2007
That "Beautiful Plants of the Seychelles" book is dreadful - not worth buying even cheap, definitely not for $178!!
posted by hongkong9 at 10:39 am (EST) on Sep 16, 2007
You asked about the government booklets on Hong Kong trees - yes, I have them, but I keep them in my office at work (I'm a professional botanist), and I decided to keep my librarything account just for my "home library". I love the look of your library, by the way!
posted by hongkong9 at 9:07 am (EST) on Sep 15, 2007
Well, now you've got me beat by five books! I wish I had all your terrific titles on gardens & Portuguese. I've got some collection building to do in those areas. Great library photos - looks a bit like my place!
Ciao,
Jim
posted by walshga at 11:50 pm (EST) on Sep 12, 2007
Set books from compulsion; cookery and travel from choice! Only a few Russian words have stuck, I'm afraid
posted by iannmag at 12:09 pm (EST) on Sep 10, 2007
Yes, indeed – “Hops and Hop Picking” certainly brings back memories, even for those of us born just over the border in Silly Sussex. At least the oast-houses survive, even if they’re not used for drying hops any more.
Regards,
Tom
posted by TabbyTom at 7:48 am (EST) on Sep 10, 2007
posted by Larxol at 9:20 am (EST) on Sep 9, 2007
I've actually been to your part of the world too, incuding the Monserrate garden and the Sintra Palace (back in 1996).
I'm no botanist but the tree in my photo's probably a pohutukawa Metrosideros excelsa (sometimes called 'The New Zealand Christmas tree' because it has bright red flowers at that time of the year).
Nice to hear from you.
Cheers
Grant
posted by europhile at 8:07 am (EST) on Sep 8, 2007
I know I have some more stuff about gardens (interested about them), only that I got really lazy and I abandoned LT for some time. The problem is that about 60% of my books are still in boxes that I brought all the way from New York (where I used to live for many years); and is a terrible thing - as you might imagine - because they just get out of sight and is like not having them at all. But, moving soon, bigger place, more books are on the way to LT. Say hello to Mr.Thacker, I did like his "History.." Best regards. It was nice to hear from you.
Mario Martin
Mar del Plata
ARGENTINA
posted by martinmdq at 7:17 pm (EST) on Sep 4, 2007
thanks for the note, and the appreciation for the database. A refurbishment has been in my plans for a long time, but alas, time is not on my side. I had a look at your library, and yes, even counting all the volumes in italian which I haven't got around to enter manually, there is almost no overlap! But the gardens I'm into are less flowery than yours.
But we do share Shama's, don't we?
I'll be in Portugal in November, any hints or suggestions (we'll land in Lisboa)?
posted by marcobabi at 12:54 pm (EST) on Sep 4, 2007
posted by Casalima at 6:33 pm (EST) on Sep 2, 2007
http://gardens.uncc.edu/Titan%20Arum.htm
I think sometimes LT cuts long links.
posted by Dragonfly at 12:26 am (EST) on Sep 1, 2007
They are supposed to come and install my bookcases Tuesday! It's been postponed twice so I'm not holding my breath, but I will be so happy when I can unpack all these books. I guess that plant books must reflect plants -- there's an infinite variety. My books, of course, are mostly about American plants. The odd thing is that I don't garden. I love looking at gardens and I love walking through the woods looking at native plants, but I just don't have a green thumb. Here's a link to a plant story, http://www.publicrelations.uncc.edu/reso...
(Go down the page a little.) I didn't get to see Bella because I coudn't get off work, but our Native Plant Society meets at the greenhouse and I'm fascinated by their collection of carniverous plants.
posted by Dragonfly at 8:12 am (EST) on Aug 30, 2007
I noticed that we shared some titles in common - I always have a brief check when I put a new batch of books up.
Yes I have visited some Chinese gardens, mostly in Suzhou, but a couple in Beijing. I've also visited some of the Portuguese gardens (as well as gardens in Madeira) that you have written about, although I must confess that I don't think I have any of your own books.
Best wishes
posted by infopt2000 at 7:26 am (EST) on Aug 30, 2007
posted by Beraketa at 7:43 am (EST) on Aug 29, 2007
posted by paeonia at 8:22 pm (EST) on Aug 26, 2007
On a side note: I see Manini seems to be onw of your areas of expertise. Does any of your books cover Regaleira?
posted by claudiadias at 7:11 pm (EST) on Aug 25, 2007
posted by claudiadias at 12:16 pm (EST) on Aug 25, 2007
posted by claudiadias at 7:57 am (EST) on Aug 21, 2007
posted by Moranga at 6:59 pm (EST) on Jul 22, 2007
I hope to grow my collection of gardening and nature books...may look to your library for inspiration.
posted by frannylovesfigs at 11:04 pm (EST) on Jul 4, 2007
posted by Casalima at 7:05 am (EST) on Jun 26, 2007