After reading this book, I have decided to quit my job and devote my life to growing bonsai. (I will have to, if I am to follow the detailed care instructions correctly.) See you later, friends.
Actually, since I will be growing mine from seed, I won't be quitting my job for another 5-10 years, since it will take that long for them to become anything resembling a bonsai. And I will screw up, so let's tack another 5 years on that. Heck, I'll screw up more than once. I think my bonsai collection will just be getting off the ground by the time I am set to retire anyway, so it's all good.
I gave the book 4 stars, but honestly, that's a stab in the dark. It has beautiful photographs and covers a wide range of information, from types of bonsai to suitable tree species to care and pruning instructions. It's just hard to tell how good the advice is when I know nothing. The advice of idiots sounds sage to the ignorant. But it sounded good. Mostly, anyway. I do sense some gaps. For example, there is a section on growing bonsai from seed, but it basically tells you how to sprout them. So suppose I get some tree seeds to grow. When do I start pruning them? Do I grow them in the ground, or a regular pot, for a few years, or do I put them directly into a shallow little bonsai pot? Some basic questions like this are left unanswered.
This brings us back to that "I'll screw up" bit.
Check back in 20 years for an update on the 4-star rating I gave this book. It could end up at anywhere from 1 to 5, unless by then I have given up the internet and am sitting in my bonsai garden in deep meditation.