The ** Country Life" Library of Gardening 



— continued 



MY GARDEN 



By Eden Phillpotts. 207 pages. 60 full-page illustrations. 

 Cheap Edition, 6s. net. By post, 6s. <,d. 



" It is a thoroughly practical book, addressed especially to those who, 

 like himself, have about an acre of flower garden, and are willing and com- 

 petent to help a gardener to make it as rich, as harmonious, and as enduring 

 as possible. His chapters on irises are particularly good." — Woi-tJ. 



ROCK AND WATER GARDENS : Their Making and 

 Planting 



With Chapters on Wall and Heath Gardens. By F. H. 

 Meyer. Edited by E. T. Cook. 6s. net. By post, 6s. 4^. 



" In this book the author has studied every detail of Nature's ways in 

 order to reproduce in the garden the charms of natural scenery,"— 

 Sta?tdard. 



TREES AND SHRUBS FOR ENGLISH GARDENS 



By E. T. Cook. I2y. 6d. net. By post, 12s. i id. 



"It contains a mass of instruction and illustration not always to be 

 found altogether when required, and as such it will be very useful as a 

 popular handbook for amateurs and others anxious to grow trees and 

 stixwh?,."— Field. 



GARDENS FOR SMALL COUNTRY HOUSES 



By Gertrude Jekyll and Lawrence Weaver. Third 

 Edition, revised and enlarged, large 4to, cloth gilt, 15^. net. 

 By post (inland), i5j-. "jd. 300 pages, and over 400 illustra- 

 tions, with coloured frontispiece. No owner of a small country 

 house who wishes to improve its garden can afford to be with- 

 out this notable book. 



The Spectator sz.y%: " There could be no more helpful book than this 

 to consult." 



THE CENTURY BOOK OF GARDENING 



Edited by E. T. Cook. A Comprehensive Work for every 

 Lover of the Garden. 624 pages, with about 600 illustrations, 

 many of them full-page 4to (12 in. by 8^ in.). 2lJ-.net. By 

 post, 21^-. \od, 



" No department of gardening is neglected, and the illustrations of 

 famous and beautiful gardens and of the many winsome achievements of 

 the gardener's art are so numerous and attractive as to make the veriest 

 cockney yearn to turn gardener. If 'The Century Book of Gardening' 

 does not make all who see it covet their neighbours' gardens through sheer 

 despair of ever making for themselves such gardens as are there illustrated, 

 it should, at any rate, inspire every one who desires to have a garden with 

 an ambition to make it as beautiful as he can." — Times. 



