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The names of plants that are so familiar to us magnolia,
bougainvillea, sequioa may just be names, but behind the names lie
stories of espionage and heroism, rivalry and mystery and
inspiration. In the Name of Plants relates the stories of these
people and the plants that were named after them. Each chapter
tells the story of the person for which each plant is named, many
of whom were pioneering explorers, collectors and botanists - such
as Alice Eastwood who has the yellow aster, Eastwoodia elegans,
named after her. Eastwood explored previously uncharted territories
in the 19th century and famously saved the California Academy of
Science's priceless plant collection from the 1906 San Francisco
earthquake. Subjects range from Charles Darwin (Darwinia) and
legendary French botanist Pierre Magnol (Magnolia), to US founding
fathers George Washington (Washingtonia) and Benjamin Franklin
(Franklinia). Each entry is accompanied by superb artworks from the
Library of the Natural History Museum, as well as photography of
specimens and wild plants and the essential taxonomic details and
geographic spread for each species.
'Flora' contains 20 essays on the history of key plant families,
including cacti, daffodils, iris, magnolia, poppies, roses, tulips
and waterlilies. It explains how plants have adopted remarkable
behaviours for survival in a variety of harsh habitats and also
tells the remarkable stories of the adventurous botanist explorers
who braved disease, slave traders, wars, jungles and other dangers
to collect plants now commonly grown in our own gardens. 'Flora' is
graced with hundreds of stunning colour illustrations selectedfrom
the vast collection of original botanical paintings held at the
Natural History Museum, London.
Orchids fascinate. Parts of the orchid flower have shapes unlike
any other flowering plant, and the sheer number of species means
that their variety is seemingly endless, with an ability to
interbreed and create ever more fantastical forms. Extraordinary
Orchids reveals some of the bizarre life-styles and interactions
that botanists have uncovered amongst different categories of
orchids: the epiphytic orchids, the ground-dwelling ones, the
insect-mimicking ones and those whose lifestyles are so closely
bound to their interactions with insects and birds. Many orchid
common names refer to the shape-shifting forms of the orchid flower
- the 'man-orchids' or 'monkey orchids' are so called because of
their resemblance to the primate form. Orchids lend themselves to
depiction, and botanical artworks of them abound. Who could resist
painting or drawing such intriguing shapes? Sandra Knapp examines
each category of orchid in turn and all are illustrated with
stunning artwork from artists such as Ferdinand and Franz Bauer,
Arthur Harry Church, Sydney Parkinson, Henry Fletcher Hance, John
Russell Reeves, and images taken from James Bateman's The
Orchidaceae of Mexico and Guatemala.
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