Growing Tasty Tropical Plants in any home, anywhere
by Laurelynn Martin and Byron Martin
Storey Publishing, 2010
For those of us living in cool, northern climates, the idea of growing tropical fruit at home for consumption has been a dream that few have dared pursue... until now.
Laurelynn and Byron Martin, third-generation greenhouse growers in Connecticut, have recently started supplying tropical plants to home gardeners who are growing them on decks, patios and in containers indoors all across North America.
"Growing Tasty Tropical Plants in any home, anywhere" documents their conviction that almost everyone can enjoy the taste of the tropics without leaving home, provided they have the proper cultivars.
"One of the keys to success with tropical container fruits is providing the right environment for the plants as they grow and mature," they explain. "Some types need a winter cool period, while others do best in warm conditions year-round. Some tropicals do well in partial sun, but many of them will produce fruit only when the grow in very bright conditions, such as a sunny windowsill, sunroom, or conservatory during the winter. If you don't have a sunroom or some large south-facing windows, then you'll need to explore using supplemental lighting for these plants."
The Martins profile 47 fruiting tropical plants in their text, from the well-known citrus fruits to the exotics like acerola, dwarf pomegranate and papaya and even chocolate, coffee, cinnamon, vanilla and sugarcane plants. An artist’s sketch and close up photograph of foliage, fruit and flower is included with each featured plant along with detailed instructions on cultivation, care and harvest.
"If you're brand new to container gardening, it's a good idea to start with plants that grow quickly and can tolerate a range ot temperatures," the Martins advise. These include coffee, fig, ‘Meyer’ lemon, naranjilla, orangeberry, tree tomato, and yerba mate plants.
This book invites readers to a gardening adventure rich with sunny flavors and exotic fragrances, growing fruits once forbidden beyond the tropics.
Growing Tasty Tropical Plants
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Monday, February 28, 2011
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Review: The Startup Game
The Startup Game
Inside the Partnership between Venture Capitalists and Entrepreneurs
by William H. Draper and Eric Schmidt
Palgrave Macmillan, 2011
Co-authored by one of the best known and most respected venture
capitalists, William Draper, this book is an autobiographical account of
40 years of investing in entrepreneurs and their ideas.
Draper uses stories of risky investments, cagey CEOs and rancorous board
meetings to illustrate how he evaluates innovations and their innovators.
Object lessons drawn from his involvement with Skype, OpenTable, Hotmail,
Prolacta BioScience, Baidu, Selectica and dozens of other high-tech firms
make for fascinating reading.
Draper sums up much of his message in "The Top Ten Avoidable Mistakes of
Entrepreneurs" where he elaborates on the following preventable blunders:
* Creating overly optimistic projections about market size and
customer acquisitions.
* Underestimating timelines.
* Trying to do everything yourself.
* Failing to master the elevator pitch.
* Not downsizing when necessary.
* Being inflexible.
* Not developing a clear marketing plan.
* Building a board that consists only of friends.
* Not taking action in a recession.
* Not knowing the right way to approach venture capitalists.
Anyone expecting to meet with venture capitalists now or in the future
would be well advised to read this text carefully and take its lessons to
heart.
The Startup Game
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Review: The Startup Game
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Inside the Partnership between Venture Capitalists and Entrepreneurs
by William H. Draper and Eric Schmidt
Palgrave Macmillan, 2011
Co-authored by one of the best known and most respected venture
capitalists, William Draper, this book is an autobiographical account of
40 years of investing in entrepreneurs and their ideas.
Draper uses stories of risky investments, cagey CEOs and rancorous board
meetings to illustrate how he evaluates innovations and their innovators.
Object lessons drawn from his involvement with Skype, OpenTable, Hotmail,
Prolacta BioScience, Baidu, Selectica and dozens of other high-tech firms
make for fascinating reading.
Draper sums up much of his message in "The Top Ten Avoidable Mistakes of
Entrepreneurs" where he elaborates on the following preventable blunders:
* Creating overly optimistic projections about market size and
customer acquisitions.
* Underestimating timelines.
* Trying to do everything yourself.
* Failing to master the elevator pitch.
* Not downsizing when necessary.
* Being inflexible.
* Not developing a clear marketing plan.
* Building a board that consists only of friends.
* Not taking action in a recession.
* Not knowing the right way to approach venture capitalists.
Anyone expecting to meet with venture capitalists now or in the future
would be well advised to read this text carefully and take its lessons to
heart.
The Startup Game
Outrider Books Blog
Review: The Startup Game
How-to and Guidebooks
The Book Stall Reviews Archive
Submit a Book for Review
Monday, January 24, 2011
The View from Lazy Point
A Compassionate Mind
Review: The View from Lazy Point
"In the panic among the fishes and in the frenzying terns, it’s also evident that nature has neither sentiment nor mercy. What it does have is life, truth, and logic. And it strives for what it cannot have: an end to danger, an assurance of longevity, a moment’s peace, and a comfortable death. It’s like us all, because we are natural.The View from Lazy Point: A Natural Year in an Unnatural World by Carl Safina
"What anyone needs to know about mercy, one can learn by watching nature strive, seeing people struggle, and realizing what a compassionate mind could add to the picture. So I’m also struck that we who have named ourselves “wise humans” — Homo sapiens — haven’t quite realized that nature, civilization, peace, and human dignity are all facets of the same gemstone, and that abrasion of one tarnishes the whole."
Review: The View from Lazy Point
Friday, January 14, 2011
Classic Cookbooks: Selections From Betty Crocker's Dinner For Two Cookbook
Selections From Betty Crocker's Dinner For Two Cookbook
by Betty Crocker
General Mills, 1973
Every recipe in this cookbook has beenm tested and retested in the Betty Crocker Kitchens and in homes all across the country.
Cooking for two?
Here are hundreds of new dining ideas for every taste and occasion.
Every menu is complete - main courses, vegetables, breads, desserts - all especially for two.
Selections From Betty Crocker's Dinner For Two Cookbook
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Cookbooks
by Betty Crocker
General Mills, 1973
Every recipe in this cookbook has beenm tested and retested in the Betty Crocker Kitchens and in homes all across the country.
Cooking for two?
Here are hundreds of new dining ideas for every taste and occasion.
Every menu is complete - main courses, vegetables, breads, desserts - all especially for two.
Selections From Betty Crocker's Dinner For Two Cookbook
Book Search
Book Store
Cookbooks
Now in Review: Chanterelle Dreams, Amanita Nightmares
Chanterelle Dreams, Amanita Nightmares
The Love, Lore, and Mystique of Mushrooms
by Greg A. Marley
Chelsea Green, 2010
Throughout history, people have had a complex and confusing relationship with mushrooms. Are fungi food or medicine, beneficial decomposers or deadly "toadstools" ready to kill anyone foolhardy enough to eat them? In fact, there is truth in all these statements.
In Chanterelle Dreams, Amanita Nightmares, author Greg Marley reveals some of the wonders and mysteries of mushrooms, and our conflicting human reactions to them.
The Love, Lore, and Mystique of Mushrooms
by Greg A. Marley
Chelsea Green, 2010
Throughout history, people have had a complex and confusing relationship with mushrooms. Are fungi food or medicine, beneficial decomposers or deadly "toadstools" ready to kill anyone foolhardy enough to eat them? In fact, there is truth in all these statements.
In Chanterelle Dreams, Amanita Nightmares, author Greg Marley reveals some of the wonders and mysteries of mushrooms, and our conflicting human reactions to them.
Sunday, January 2, 2011
Now in Review: Fire in the Forest
Fire in the Forest
by Peter Thomas and Robert McApline
Cambridge University Press, 2010
How destructive or beneficial are forest fires to wildlife? Should we be trying to reduce or increase the amount of fire in forests? How are forest fires controlled, and why does this sometimes fail? What effect will climate change have?
These and many other questions are answered in this richly illustrated book, written in non-technical language.
Fire in the Forest
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Nature Writing and Natural Histories
by Peter Thomas and Robert McApline
Cambridge University Press, 2010
How destructive or beneficial are forest fires to wildlife? Should we be trying to reduce or increase the amount of fire in forests? How are forest fires controlled, and why does this sometimes fail? What effect will climate change have?
These and many other questions are answered in this richly illustrated book, written in non-technical language.
Fire in the Forest
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Nature Writing and Natural Histories
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Classic Cookbooks: Adventures in Cooking with Health Foods
Adventures in Cooking with Health Foods
by Nancy Sutton
Pyramid, 1972
Food grown naturally and cooked with a gourmet's touch! That's the happy combination offered in this lively, luscious book.
Mrs. Sutton puts together nature's own whole grains and vegetables with the gourmet flavorings of wines, spices and herbs.
She shows in easy-to-follow recipes how to prepare unforgettable dishes - from macadamia nut cheese filling and beets in pomegranate sauce to rose petal sherbet and carob coconut Easter eggs.
If you want to start eating healthier, tastier meals, begin by reading this book - and go on to prove in your own kitchen that the natural way with food is the most delicious way.
Adventures in Cooking with Health Foods
Book Search
Book Store
Cookbooks
by Nancy Sutton
Pyramid, 1972
Food grown naturally and cooked with a gourmet's touch! That's the happy combination offered in this lively, luscious book.
Mrs. Sutton puts together nature's own whole grains and vegetables with the gourmet flavorings of wines, spices and herbs.
She shows in easy-to-follow recipes how to prepare unforgettable dishes - from macadamia nut cheese filling and beets in pomegranate sauce to rose petal sherbet and carob coconut Easter eggs.
If you want to start eating healthier, tastier meals, begin by reading this book - and go on to prove in your own kitchen that the natural way with food is the most delicious way.
Adventures in Cooking with Health Foods
Book Search
Book Store
Cookbooks
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