The ''Country Life" Library of Gardening 



— continued 



THE BOOK OF BRITISH FERNS 



By Chas. T. Druery, F.L.S., V.M.H., President of the 

 British Pteridological Society. 3J'. 6a'. net. By post, 3j. lod. 



"The book is well and lucidly written and arranged; it is altogether 

 beautifully got up. Mr. Druery has long been recognised as an authority 

 on the subject." — Si. James's Gazette. 



THE UNHEATED GREENHOUSE 



By Mrs. K. L. Davidson. Cheap Edition, 5^-. net. By post, 

 5^. Ad- 



" An infinity of pleasure can be obtained from the due use of an un- 

 healed house built under proper conditions, and it is the function of Mrs. 

 Davidson's book to provide hints and directions how to build such a house, 

 and how to cultivate the plants that can be cultivated with advantage 

 without artificial heat." — Pali Mall Gazette. 



WALL AND WATER GARDENS 



With Chapters on the Rock Garden, the Heath Garden and 

 the Paved Water Garden. 5th Edition. Revised and 

 Enlarged. By Gertrude Jekyll. Containing instructions 

 and hints on the cultivation of suitable plants on dry walls, 

 rock walls, in streams, marsh pools, lakes, ponds, tanks and 

 water margins. With 200 illustrations. Large 8vo, 220 pages. 

 1 2 J. ()d. net. By post, 12s. iid. 



" He who will consent to follow Miss Jekyll aright will find that under 

 her guidance the old walls, the stone steps, the rockeries, the ponds, or 

 streamlets of his garden will presently blossom with all kinds of flowers 

 undreamed of, and become marvels of varied foliage." — Times. 



COLOUR SCHEMES FOR THE FLOWER GARDEN 



By Gertrude Jekyll. With over 100 illustrations and 

 planting plans. Third Edition. I2s. 6d. net. By post, 13J. 



" Miss Jekyll is one of the most stimulating of those who write about 

 what may be called the pictorial side of gardening. . . . She has spent a 

 lifetime in learning how to grow and place flowers so as to make the most 

 beautiful and satisfying effects, and she has imparted the fruits of her ex- 

 perience in these delightful pages." — Daily Mail. 



THE FRUIT GARDEN 



By George Bunyard and Owen Thomas. 507 pages. 

 10^ in. by 7J in. I2s, bd. net. By post, I3j'. 



" Without any doubt the best book of the sort yet published. There is 

 a separate chapter for every kind of fruit, and each chapter is a book in 

 itself — there Ls, in fact, everything that any one can need or wish for in 

 order to succeed in fruit growing. The book simply teems with illustra- 

 tions, diagrams, and outlines.' — Journal of the Royal Horticultural 

 Society. 



