Gardenista: The Definitive Guide to Stylish Outdoor Spaces by Michelle Slatalla was, for me, no where near, especially with so many shots being indoors. The gorgeous cover misled me to think there would be an abundance of garden rooms, instead I was shown way too many patios, decks, saunas, steps, doors, windows, and kitchens with merely a handful of actual garden images in the “Thirteen Gardens We Love” section. Each told about the gardener and their garden, with a “Steal This Look” section for points of interest after every showcased space. It was everything I ended my subscription to Fine Gardening because of. (When I buy a book or magazine about gardens, I expect to see gardens, not pools.) I would have been happy if they gave more extensive page allowance to the actual gardens of “The Antiquarians at Home” and their gorgeously lush terrain and “ The Fairy-Tale Garden in the City” with its notes of whimsy in a walled her yard. Both, by no coincidence, in London. The “Color Stories” chapter did present more delights via the English gardens shown and one Californian. I did appreciate the 10 design ideas. “Finishing Touches” were a waste. (A plain mailbox. A Stackable washer dryer..in the garden?) And then The Gardenista 100: 36 pages of their picks for outdoors, that included a promo paragraph and where to find it with image. This, to me, was the biggest waste of space. Basically, it was a catalogue with 2-3 images per page taking up pages I would rather see noted items being used...IN A GARDEN! Following that was the “Expert Advice” section, which actually held some interest. “Before You Dig, was informative to the novice. “Where to Splurge, Where to Save” was common sense with no revelations. “Small Details, Big Impact” had some good tips. “Getting (environmentally) Friendly” was also a good section. “The Process” went into creating a team to do your garden for you. Then “Resources We Swear By” .. another catalogue section, but without the pictures. Then finishing up with a list of their Featured Architects, Designers, and Landscape Architects” before the index pages. At $40 for this hardback, I recommend waiting for a soft back version at (hopefully) half the cost. I would not call this a total waste, but from page 292 on, it came close. 389 pages, not including index, 8x10, full color images.
Thank you NetGalley for the opportunity to read this book.