Scan barcode
hopef's review
informative
lighthearted
medium-paced
4.25
A thoroughly enjoyable-if sometimes meandering-read.
paulalovesbooks's review
3.0
Thanks Netgalley for the ARC.
This book is fascinating, it is interesting to think about what flowers mean in human culture. This book touches on all possible topics: sociology, culture, art, medicine, etc.
Flowers accompany us at funerals, but also to celebrate life. They appear in the most beautiful fields and also among the crevices of large cities.
There are flowers for lovers, for friends, family, children, grandparents; we use flowers to wish (he loves me, he loves me not). It is an element full of meanings. I loved reading about all these reflections, I really enjoyed it.
This book is fascinating, it is interesting to think about what flowers mean in human culture. This book touches on all possible topics: sociology, culture, art, medicine, etc.
Flowers accompany us at funerals, but also to celebrate life. They appear in the most beautiful fields and also among the crevices of large cities.
There are flowers for lovers, for friends, family, children, grandparents; we use flowers to wish (he loves me, he loves me not). It is an element full of meanings. I loved reading about all these reflections, I really enjoyed it.
surpriseitstaz's review
3.0
This was a loose, rambling narrative of 16 different flowers. While some of the stories were fascinating, it was hard at times to stay focused as the stories jumped all over the place. The book also ended quite abruptly for me. Overall, enjoyed it, probably would not read again.
betta's review
4.0
the right amount of history on each season's flowers written.
Boddy does an amazing job at writing about the importance and beauty of flowers.
especially loved how many different authors and their works are mentioned, and the stunning pictures and paintings within this beautiful book.
Boddy does an amazing job at writing about the importance and beauty of flowers.
especially loved how many different authors and their works are mentioned, and the stunning pictures and paintings within this beautiful book.
amalia1985's review
1.0
"Daffodils made D.H. Lawrence think of ‘ruffled birds on their perches’; yellow cabs reminded Frederick Seidel of daffodils. John Ruskin brought a fine-tuned sensibility to bear when declaring a bunch of anemones ‘marvellous in their exquisitely nervous trembling and veining of colour – violin playing in scarlet on a white ground’. James Schuyler, a curator at New York’s Museum of Modern Art as well as a poet, couldn’t ‘get over’ the beauty that met him at five o’clock ‘on the day before March first’, 1954, when he saw the green leaves and pink flowers of the tulips on his desk against the backdrop of a setting Manhattan sun."
And if this paragraph makes sense to you, you get a reading medal.
This was supposed to be a beautiful book about the beauty of flowers, the legends, the stories, the poems, the paintings. And it tried to be. Hard. Presenting sixteen plants, divided by seasons, its only redeeming quality the vivid illustrations and the reference to Jean Genet's Un Chant d'Amour, his only film.
And that's about it.
Let me count my issues with it.
Oh, right. They're too many…
Unnecessary political remarks. Why does everything get politicised these days? It's tiresome.
Excuse me, but when a writer starts making references to Sex and the City and similar TV series made for stupid people, I begin to seriously doubt her integrity. Even if her comments are dismissive (as they ought to be). TV references about a bunch of sex-crazed bimbos side-by-side to Romantic poets and remarks about the Troubles?
Are you serious?
The writing is all over the place. Too many extracts "woven" into the paragraphs, too many clarifications, too many parentheses. Footnotes would have been a better choice, in my opinion. I mean, do we really need to be told what "photosynthesis " is? It seemed to me a poor effort on the part of the writer to show off.
A little more respect towards Oscar Wilde wouldn't hurt. Her attitude is particularly high-and-mighty towards certain issues. And her obsession with D. H. Laurence acquired exhausting proportions. In addition, she needs to check her fact on Ancient Greek culture and mythology. Her inaccuracies were shockingly ignorant. In addition, she completely ignores the well-known Native American legend of the princess and the Sun God which is linked to the sunflower. But yes, let's write about Mao Zedong instead...
In addition, writing about saffron and not mentioning the Greek variety of the beautiful plant, referring instead to...Essex, Pennsylvania and the supposedly "nationalist" connotations of its use in Asia (yeah, I don't know where that came from) was the final stroke.
We get it, greenhouses bad!!!
Numerous syntactic and grammatical errors.
Also, "middle-age reflection"? Seriously?
Some may like this one. But I wouldn't let it anywhere near my bookcase. To me, it is one more example of a "writer" that desires to show off her limited knowledge by stacking quote upon quote in every single paragraph, serving dubious political agendas. How was that even possible in a book about flowers? The explanation hasn't bloomed in my mind yet, and I won't bother...
Many thanks to Yale University Press and NetGalley for the ARC…
And if this paragraph makes sense to you, you get a reading medal.
This was supposed to be a beautiful book about the beauty of flowers, the legends, the stories, the poems, the paintings. And it tried to be. Hard. Presenting sixteen plants, divided by seasons, its only redeeming quality the vivid illustrations and the reference to Jean Genet's Un Chant d'Amour, his only film.
And that's about it.
Let me count my issues with it.
Oh, right. They're too many…
Unnecessary political remarks. Why does everything get politicised these days? It's tiresome.
Excuse me, but when a writer starts making references to Sex and the City and similar TV series made for stupid people, I begin to seriously doubt her integrity. Even if her comments are dismissive (as they ought to be). TV references about a bunch of sex-crazed bimbos side-by-side to Romantic poets and remarks about the Troubles?
Are you serious?
The writing is all over the place. Too many extracts "woven" into the paragraphs, too many clarifications, too many parentheses. Footnotes would have been a better choice, in my opinion. I mean, do we really need to be told what "photosynthesis " is? It seemed to me a poor effort on the part of the writer to show off.
A little more respect towards Oscar Wilde wouldn't hurt. Her attitude is particularly high-and-mighty towards certain issues. And her obsession with D. H. Laurence acquired exhausting proportions. In addition, she needs to check her fact on Ancient Greek culture and mythology. Her inaccuracies were shockingly ignorant. In addition, she completely ignores the well-known Native American legend of the princess and the Sun God which is linked to the sunflower. But yes, let's write about Mao Zedong instead...
In addition, writing about saffron and not mentioning the Greek variety of the beautiful plant, referring instead to...Essex, Pennsylvania and the supposedly "nationalist" connotations of its use in Asia (yeah, I don't know where that came from) was the final stroke.
We get it, greenhouses bad!!!
Numerous syntactic and grammatical errors.
Also, "middle-age reflection"? Seriously?
Some may like this one. But I wouldn't let it anywhere near my bookcase. To me, it is one more example of a "writer" that desires to show off her limited knowledge by stacking quote upon quote in every single paragraph, serving dubious political agendas. How was that even possible in a book about flowers? The explanation hasn't bloomed in my mind yet, and I won't bother...
Many thanks to Yale University Press and NetGalley for the ARC…
sternbrunchdaddy's review
informative
lighthearted
relaxing
slow-paced
5.0
A beautifully illustrated and quietly informative piece of floral sociology
wordsandnocturnes's review
informative
slow-paced
4.0
Flowers, as we know, have different significance and meanings. Blooming Flowers seeks to explore the meanings behind selected flowers. With the large number of flora out in the world, it would be difficult to cover every single one of them. Blooming Flowers solves this by selecting just a few flowers and categorising them into the four seasons.
Although this book is centred around flowers in Europe and America, some of these flowers originated in the East, from countries like India and China. Blooming Flowers explores the different meanings of flowers drawn from many cultures and even ideas in a vast number of literature, including the likes of Shakespeare and Oscar Wilde. By doing this, the book effectively explores the history of these flowers and what they symbolised in both fiction and reality.
This book was informative, and managed to keep it interesting throughout the book. Besides introducing the flowers and providing small illustrations to give an idea to the reader of what the flowers look like, related art or photographs were slipped in between all the information. This gives the book brief breaks between text and gives a clearer picture of what the author is describing. As a plus, it does make the book more aesthetically pleasing and more inviting to read.
Received from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Many thanks to Netgalley, Yale University Press, and Kasia Boddy for giving me the chance to read Blooming Flowers
From Words & Nocturnes.
Although this book is centred around flowers in Europe and America, some of these flowers originated in the East, from countries like India and China. Blooming Flowers explores the different meanings of flowers drawn from many cultures and even ideas in a vast number of literature, including the likes of Shakespeare and Oscar Wilde. By doing this, the book effectively explores the history of these flowers and what they symbolised in both fiction and reality.
This book was informative, and managed to keep it interesting throughout the book. Besides introducing the flowers and providing small illustrations to give an idea to the reader of what the flowers look like, related art or photographs were slipped in between all the information. This gives the book brief breaks between text and gives a clearer picture of what the author is describing. As a plus, it does make the book more aesthetically pleasing and more inviting to read.
Received from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Many thanks to Netgalley, Yale University Press, and Kasia Boddy for giving me the chance to read Blooming Flowers
From Words & Nocturnes.