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The Tulip by Anna Pavord
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The Tulip (original 1999; edition 2000)

by Anna Pavord (Author)

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701832,611 (3.63)23
"A twentieth anniversary edition of the classic, featuring new material by the author. Anna Pavord's internationally bestselling sensation, The Tulip, is the story of a flower that has driven men mad. Greed, desire, anguish, and devotion have all played their part in the development of the tulip into a worldwide phenomenon. Today, the United States alone imports three thousand million tulip bulbs each year. No other flower has ever carried so much consequence; it charts political upheavals, illuminates social behavior, mirrors economic booms and busts, plots the ebb and flow of religious persecution. Why did the tulip dominate so many lives through so many centuries in so many countries? Anna Pavord, a self-confessed tulipomaniac, spent six years looking for answers, roaming through Asia, India, and the Ottoman Empire to tell how a humble wildflower of the Asian steppes made its way to Turkey and from there took the whole of Western Europe by storm. Sumptuously illustrated from a wide range of sources, this irresistible volume has become a bible, a unique source book, a universal gift book, and a joy to all who possess it. This beautifully redesigned edition features a new Preface by the author, a completely revised listing of the best varieties of this incomparable flower to choose for your garden, and a reorganized listing of tulip species, to reflect the latest thinking by taxonomists."--… (more)
Member:librivendola
Title:The Tulip
Authors:Anna Pavord (Author)
Info:Bloomsbury Publishing, Limited (2000), Edition: First Edition, 304 pages
Collections:Saggi/Essays
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The Tulip by Anna Pavord (1999)

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» See also 23 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
Really interesting read. And so nice to think about tulips and Spring when the weather is so dreich. ( )
  dylkit | Jul 16, 2022 |
I really wanted to love this, but I just lost interest way before the author was fully immersed in the subject. I'm a Philistine, I like pretty flowers. The original tulips were not all that attractive. But apparently they were nearly as tasty as onions. ( )
  Laurelyn | Oct 20, 2017 |
I read some parts of this book but it was a bit heavy going, so I am afraid that I will be passing it on unfinished.
  isabelx | Mar 8, 2011 |
Judging by its engaging introduction, The Tulip could have been a really good book. Unfortunately, it quickly degenerates into a stultifyingly lifeless slog through a laundry list of tulip varieties and tulip aficionados across four centuries. There are only twelve color plates for 268 pages of text, and as Pavord does not indicate to what portions of the text the plates refer, they are nearly useless.

Pavord may have penned six other books prior to The Tulip, but she is no historian. The text is badly organised, highly repetitive, and lacks the necessary context or structure to put the flower’s development into a historical perspective. Indeed, it reads like nothing so much as a shallow Cliff’s Notes of the sources Pavord lists in her bibliography. It also includes several pages of untranslated French that reek of pretension given the fact that Pavord obtained English translations for all the other non-English sources she quoted in the book. Pavord must have had an audience in mind when she penned The Tulip, but I’ll be damned if I can figure out who it was, and I doubt all but the most completist of readers will be able to make it through to the end. ( )
3 vote Trismegistus | Mar 25, 2009 |
A history of the domestication of the tulip and its spread into western Europe, with the subsequent explosion in popularity as it entered new regions. This book contains quite a bit of interesting information about the growth and fashion of tulips when they were first introduced as garden plants, as well as history of the layout and fashion of gardens in general, however it is slow-moving and somewhat repetitive. Part of this I believe is due to trying to expand the subject matter to fill more pages than it needs to be covered adequately, part due to the choice of dividing chapters by country or region and chronicling the flower's rise to - and fall from - the height of fashion in each one; the similarity in each region leads to a lot of "didn't I just read this?" ( )
  frobozz | Nov 24, 2007 |
Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
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"A twentieth anniversary edition of the classic, featuring new material by the author. Anna Pavord's internationally bestselling sensation, The Tulip, is the story of a flower that has driven men mad. Greed, desire, anguish, and devotion have all played their part in the development of the tulip into a worldwide phenomenon. Today, the United States alone imports three thousand million tulip bulbs each year. No other flower has ever carried so much consequence; it charts political upheavals, illuminates social behavior, mirrors economic booms and busts, plots the ebb and flow of religious persecution. Why did the tulip dominate so many lives through so many centuries in so many countries? Anna Pavord, a self-confessed tulipomaniac, spent six years looking for answers, roaming through Asia, India, and the Ottoman Empire to tell how a humble wildflower of the Asian steppes made its way to Turkey and from there took the whole of Western Europe by storm. Sumptuously illustrated from a wide range of sources, this irresistible volume has become a bible, a unique source book, a universal gift book, and a joy to all who possess it. This beautifully redesigned edition features a new Preface by the author, a completely revised listing of the best varieties of this incomparable flower to choose for your garden, and a reorganized listing of tulip species, to reflect the latest thinking by taxonomists."--

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Book description
CONTENTS: Introduction -- PART I: chapter one: A Flower of the East -- chapter II: The Tulip in Northern Europe -- chapter III: Early British Growers -- chapter IV: The Dutch and Tulipomania -- chapter V: Dutch Dominance -- chapter VI: The English Florists' Tulip -- chapter VII: The Last Hundred Years -- PART II: chapter VIII: Tulips: The Species -- chapter IX Tulip Cultivars -- Chronology of Tulips -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Acknowledgements -- Index.
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