
Stephanie Cohen
Author of The Perennial Gardener's Design Primer
Works by Stephanie Cohen
The Nonstop Garden: A Step-by-Step Guide to Smart Plant Choices and Four-Season Designs (2010) 45 copies
Joseph Brant: Iroquios Leader in the Revolution (Houghton Miffllin Leveled Readers) (2004) 14 copies
Northeast,The(Navigators) 2 copies
The story of flight 1 copy
Dinosaur Sue 1 copy
Where Two Deserts Meet 1 copy
Schools Then and Now 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1937-11-05
- Gender
- female
Members
Reviews
Part of me can’t believe anybody would pay for this. The book is simply pictures of fathers doing something with simple words like looked at, up dada, poo, poo dada, etc. It’s supposed to help reiterate who dada is. Most interesting part of the book is the one page at the end that tells you how to use the book and why it works. I understand all that, but I still cannot see spending any money on this book.
The Perennial Gardener's Design Primer, by Stephanie Cohen and Nancy Ondra, is a great resource for gardeners looking for design ideas, whether for creating a new garden space or renovating an existing space. The strength of this book lies in two areas: the sample designs with plant lists, and the detailed descriptions of two new gardens put in by the authors themselves.
The sample designs are well done, and I really love the long description of what the design is attempting to accomplish. show more Additionally, each design in accompanied by a description of the plants used and alternatives are given for almost every plant. I also liked the sections in which Cohen and Ondra describe new gardens that they each put in. They tell the readers what worked, and why, and more importantly, what didn't work, why it didn't work, and what they did to improve the original plan. show less
The sample designs are well done, and I really love the long description of what the design is attempting to accomplish. show more Additionally, each design in accompanied by a description of the plants used and alternatives are given for almost every plant. I also liked the sections in which Cohen and Ondra describe new gardens that they each put in. They tell the readers what worked, and why, and more importantly, what didn't work, why it didn't work, and what they did to improve the original plan. show less
This is an exact repeat of I can say dada book except the pictures changed. Once again, I understand the concept of this book and have had thoughts of my niece who is turning to and isn’t speaking yet, but this was not Helpful. It seems so rudimentary like every parent should automatically be doing.
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 22
- Members
- 318
- Popularity
- #74,347
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 29
- Languages
- 1















