Posts Tagged ‘top 5s’

Top 5 Gardening Books

Monday, March 21st, 2011

The sun is here and warm, the soil is no longer a frozen clump or alternately a bloated, soggy mass that you can’t do anything with.  It’s officially spring and time, in other words, to dig! Time to plant seeds, clean up winter’s debris and see the miracle that is nature reborn.  I love gardening, and surprised myself a few years ago with the fact that seeds planted by me do, indeed, grow into plants.  I’m so bitten by the bug I even have an allotment, where I spend far too little time for my liking (although I did get out there these past two days!).  Here are my five gardening favorites:

1.  Allotment Month by Month – Alan Buckingham
My allotment bible.  Lots of pictures (not too surprising, as it’s a Dorling Kindersley publication), and clearly organized.  The first section handles each month separately, letting you know what to do when (when to prepare your soil, grow your seeds under glass, when to plant out, when to harvest, what pests and diseases to look out for) and giving you lots of tips on fruits and vegetables that can stand the winter.  The second part lists the separate fruits and vegetables, so you can have a quick look at when you need to cover up what specific bed or what that black spot on that leaf might mean.  It also has lots sidebars with specific tips on growing better vegetables and storage, for example.
If you don’t like growing vegetables, well, there are quite a few “regular” garden equivalents, too.

2.  Soil Mates: Companion Planting for Your Vegetable Garden – Sara Alway
What a brilliant little book this is!  Gives you all kinds of tips on how to aid nature in avoiding pests (or attracting the right insects).  See, Mother Nature is a clever thing, and has already thought of many ways in which plants influence and encourage each other to grow, and this book lays out what plants to group together to get the best out of all of them.  It’s written in a light-hearted style and has some recipes to boot!

3.  RHS Encyclopedia of Plants and Flowers – Christopher Brickell
Ah yes, a gorgeous brick of plant knowledge.  Chock-full of pictures and information and, indeed, plants.  More than 8000 of them.  Makes you want to run out to the gardening center with an unlimited creditcard…

4.  Tabletop Gardens: 40 Stylish Plantscapes for Counters and Shelves, Desktops and Windowsills – Rosemary McCreary and William Holt
I can’t take credit for this title – a customer came a few months ago asking for something like this, and I went a-hunting (see?  we do listen to you!).  Since most of us live in apartments without gardens, here is an excellent book to bring nature into your home in a stylish way.  Not that I don’t like the simple bouquet of flowers in a vase, mind you, but these plantscapes are just a level of cool up.
If you want to grow vegetables in your apartment, well, there are lots of books on growing vegetables in pots too (seriously – just type in vegetables + pots or vegetables + containers, and you get oodles of options).

5.  New Holland Concise Garden Wildlife Guide – Sandra Doyle and Stuart Carter
These small, plastic-covered books (there is also one on insects and one on trees) are perfect!  Yes, there are bats in the Netherlands, and snakes, even in urban areas.  You don’t want to know how many ducks walk through my garden on a sunny afternoon.  But what always interests me is when I’m weeding, or with my head right in the middle of a group of tomato plants because I’m harvesting or taking out the shoots, is all the teeny tiny animals buzzing about or scurrying hither and yon because I’m traipsing through their territory.  I’m always suprised by the numbers, and the variety – I must have seen about six different types and color variations of lady bugs the past two years, and this rather startlingly big bug(ger) has made our allotment his home.  These little books help me figure out what exactly it is I’m seeing.

Your Favorite Books of 2010

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

Here they are, YOUR favorite reads of 2010!  Thank you so much for sending in your lists – as ever they give us all great tips on new writers to try out.  May 2011 be filled with as much literary goodness.  :-) Click on ‘more’ to see the lists. (more…)

Top 5 Books for Babies and Toddlers

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

One of the great things about ABC is that the people who buy the stock for the store usually really love the sort of books they buy. I’m one of the children’s books buyers in Amsterdam, and my passion is picture books. Especially the sort of picture books designed for babies and toddlers. Here are five of my favorites

1. The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle

In my opinion, this is the finest picture book ever created, and the board book format is the best edition to buy it in. I remember this from my own childhood, and each time I read it – and I still do read it regularly! – I’m transported to a time when I was five years old and I thought this was the most delicious book I had ever seen. I think it still is.

I love the bold paper-collage pictures, the die-cut holes in the foods the greedy bug eats, and the way the pages change size as the book progresses. I also like the way Carle cleverly incorporates basic concepts like numbers and the days of the week into his story, making this a great book for use in classrooms. It’s the perfect baby book, and the perfect picture book for the under 5’s too.

2. Alphabooks by Julie Aigner-Clark

I’m not usually a fan of books based on children’s TV shows or films. They seem to be written by people who have no idea about what makes a good children’s  book, in the knowledge that they will sell just because of the characters they are tied to, rather than because they have any merit in and of themselves.

That being said, I think that this box of 26 little board books, based on the popular Baby Einstein DVDs is excellent, in all sorts of ways. The books have engaging pictures that include photos and fine art, as well as images of the Baby Einstein characters. There are 6 pages in each book, one word per page, and the choice of words, even for the tricky letters like X and Q, are clever and interesting. Each book is the perfect size for little hands, and great to share and talk about, and small enough to be taken everywhere.

3. Peek-A-Who? by Nina Laden

On one side of each two-page spread in this colorful book are the words “Peek-a…”, and on the other is a hole with something hiding behind it. What could it be? Turn the page to find out! It could be a cow (Peek-a-MOO!) or a ghost (Peek-a-BOO!) or your own face reflected in the mirror at the back (Peek-a-YOU!)

The pictures are bold enough for the youngest of babies, and the text is short and predictable enough to help little readers predict when to turn the page. Peek-A-Who? is silly and funny and cute and never gets old.

4. Peepo by Janet and Allen Ahlberg

This book from the early 80’s harks back to a much earlier time in the authors’ childhoods, when baths were taken in front of the kitchen hearth and toys came without batteries. For that reason, it seems to be ignored in our Amsterdam children’s section, which is a huge shame, because it really is a delightful book, perfect for bedtime reading.

Gentle, relaxing, rhyming text and illustrations on one side of each spread shows a baby in his crib, or high chair, in his bath, or baby carriage. Opposite is peephole with a tiny peek at what baby might be looking at. Turn the page and a there’s detailed, whimsical baby’s-eye-view of a typical daily activity – a walk in the park, bedtime, dinner time. The book exudes warmth and love, the text and pictures tell a tale of a baby much adored and doted on. Peepo is lovely to snuggle up with and to fall asleep to.

5. Where’s Spot by Eric Hill

Naughty Spot’s mum has called him for dinner, but Spot is hiding somewhere in the house. Lift the flaps and help her find him!

There are so many excellent lift-the-flap books with a similar format that it’s hard to choose just one. But Where’s Spot is the granddaddy of them all. First published in 1980 –  it was one of the very first lift-the-flap books – it has aged very well, perhaps only the typeface, giving it away. The pictures are bold and spare, the text could not be simpler, and the surprises behind the flaps are a lot of fun. It’s an essential first book, a guaranteed hit with the youngest of readers.

Double Top Fives

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

Inspired by two months’ leave from work, I started thinking what would be the best books to read when time isn’t an issue. Knowing that of course not everyone has time on their hands (or reads as quickly as I do) I’ve also come up with the best books to read if you’ve only got a few moments.

Top five stories for when you have lots of time (total pages: 8660)

The Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson (Quicksilver, The Confusion, and The System of the World)
Let me first say that I dislike the seventeenth century. Profoundly. I love history, but the seventeenth century is, as far as I am concerned, absolutely boring. Which makes it all the more remarkable that Neal Stephenson has managed (twice now) to keep me hooked throughout a 2600 page trilogy set in just that period. As intricate, inventive and intelligent as only Stephenson can be.

Ash: a Secret History by Mary Gentle
In a late-medieval Europe that is not quite what we would expect it to be, the state of Burgundy is a great power. And then it disappears. Modern researchers take 1100 pages to uncover the secret history of Burgundy, and especially of Ash, a mercenary captain with strange powers, even for her world…
(Editor’s note: sadly this book is currently not in print.)

A Dance to the Music of Time by Anthony Powell (collected in the First Movement, the Second Movement, the Third Movement, and the Fourth Movement)
An acquired taste, this. Twelve books charting the life of the English upper middle class from the twenties through the sixties. I always get stuck for a while in the first chapter of book six (The Kindly Ones), but I love the rest. Also very good for your vocabulary.

Vellum & Ink (The Book of All Hours) by Hal Duncan
In myth, deep history, the nearby future and somewhere else entirely, the same story keeps happening. Again. And again. And somehow something new comes from all this retelling. At one point you find that although it’s still set as prose, Duncan’s been writing flawless verse drama for pages. ‘Thoughtprovoking’ would be putting it mildly.

Middlemarch by George Eliot
For those who prefer the classics, the perfect nineteenth-century novel. 900 pages and really small letters (at least, in the Penguin edition), full of sharp observations.

Top five stories for when you’re in a hurry (total pages: 710)

Enderby’s Dark Lady by Anthony Burgess
Manages to encompass in its 150 pages two short stories, the script of a musical, and some mock-Elizabethan lyric, all haunted by Shakespeare. Demands frequent re-readings.
(Editor’s note:  Also, sadly, not currently in print.  There’s an ommibus, but that kind of defeats the purpose of this particular top 5… :-) )

The Uncommon Reader by Alan Bennett
A light-hearted meditation on reading and writing in rather odd, indeed uncommon, circumstances.

Weight by Jeanette Winterson
‘I want to tell the story again’. Jeanette Winterson manages to pack a lot of ideas into this short but inventive and moving retelling of the story of Atlas.

Loitering with Intent by Muriel Spark
If you want to read about a writer’s life in London in the middle of the twentieth century, and you don’t have time to read Anthony Powell (see above), Loitering with Intent is a very good alternative.

Travels in the Scriptorium by Paul Auster
Paul Auster started out writing about gloomy young men in gloomy New York, then gloomy middle-aged men in gloomy New York, and he has now arrived at gloomy old men – but he does it so well that it never gets boring. This little book is a brilliant and deliberate distillation of Auster’s work.

Presented by You Reviewer and Faithful Comments Writer Em Angevaare

If you have 5 (or 10) book recommendations you simply need to share with the rest of the world, please email them to us at blog@abc.nl.  We always love your tips!

You’re welcome to blog more for us, too, for book vouchers.  See the original post for all the details.

I know what I did this summer: Top 5 Summer Books

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

The summer is at its end. The days are getting shorter, the light fading and the rain making everything wet en gloomy. While some people find the rainy autumn and winter the time of the year to curl up with a book for me it is the summer. I love to sit out on my balcony till late at night reading in the natural light. Lying on the grass in a sunny park with the noise of people around me. This summer was a good reading year for me. Book after book I went through, some good some not so good. Here the top 5 of the best books I read this summer to make your autumn and winter even more special.

Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn
I have been raving here about Gillian Flynn’s second book Dark Places so I just had to read her first one Sharp Objects. Gillian Flynn has a wonderful writing style. She can make her characters so fast en witty but also very gloomy and down-to-earth.

When there is a girl missing in her small hometown of Wind Gap, Missouri, Camille Preaker gets the assignment from her Chicago-based newspaper to cover the story. Camille left this town with good reason, leaving her unloving mother, silent stepfather and manipulative stepsister behind. With lead in her shoes she comes back and investigates what happened and finds out that the death of this little girl is connected to another death a couple of years previous. While digging deeper into the case she is also gets sucked in into her dark en and very dysfunctional family.

A must read if you like a good dark psychological thriller!

The Bed I Made by Lucie Whitehouse
When you begin to read the book Kate is on the Isle of Wight where she fled to get away from Richard, her lover for almost two years. You know what happened must be quite severe for her to leave her London apartment and her friends to settle in the heart of winter on the isolated island. While slowly being accepted by people on the island and even making friends you go back and forth in the past to Richard. How they met and how their romance blossomed, how he made himself a part of her whole life, shielding her from her friends. In the beginning every couple of chapters he has a voice in the form of mobile texts or emails. The more you read the more threatening they are getting and Kate begins to fear the worst.

When first starting the book I felt it was a bit slow, but after some chapters it gains momentum and I promise you you can’t put it down. Lucie Whitehouse has a wonderful fresh voice with very real characters.

The Company of Shadows by Ruth Newman
This is a great action-packed book where you will find yourself traveling the globe.

Kate Benson is a young widow trying to piece her life back together after her husband drowned on holiday in Sicily. While going through some holiday photo’s of her friends, who just came back from Miami, she suddenly finds herself looking at her dead husband who is in the background of one of the pictures. Kate’s whole world turns upside down and she flies to Miami and then to Sicily to find the man on the photo. What really happened that fatal day in Sicily? Did Charlie really die? Did he drown or was he murdered? And who are the men trying to warn her not to look into it?

A whirlwind of a book with a crazy ending.

Apartment 16 by Adam Nevill
It’s not very often I read horror books, but after reading some raving reviews I thought I would give it ago.

Barrington House, a chic apartment building in London, is not all it seems. Apartment 16 hasn’t been opened in 50 years. Night guard Seth hears noises from the apartment and when one night while exploring what the sounds are something happens that will forever change his life.

Apryl inherited another apartment in the building from her great aunt. What starts of as a great fortune for her soon changes into an obsession where she has to know what happened to her great aunt. What is behind the door of apartment 16?!

The book is written so vividly I was actually scared of reading it alone at night. It’s a story that slowly builds up to an explosive end.

Bleed for me by Michael Robotham
Bleed For Me is part of Robotham’s series about clinical psychologist Joe O’Loughlin. Joe has separated from his wife and two children and is dealing with his Parkinson’s disease. When one evening Sienna, a friend of his daughter, turns up covered in blood his life takes a drastic turn once again. Sienna’s father has been brutally murdered in her bedroom and she is too shocked to talk about it. Joe, with the help of his friend Ruiz, goes on a, sometimes very disturbing, journey to find the truth.

Michael Robotham is one of my favorite crime writers and while his last book Bombproof was a little disappointing Bleed For Me is top-notch.

Presented by ABC Crime Buyer Pleun.

If you have 5 book recommendations you simply need to share with the rest of the world, please email them to us at blog@abc.nl.  We always love your tips!

You’re welcome to blog more for us, too, for book vouchers.  See the original post for all the details.