cover image Inside Your Japanese Garden: A Guide to Creating a Unique Japanese Garden for Your Home

Inside Your Japanese Garden: A Guide to Creating a Unique Japanese Garden for Your Home

Joseph Cali and Sadao Yasumoro. Tuttle, $24.99 (160p) ISBN 978-4-8053-1614-6

“Gardening is not a theory. It is all about learning the various scenes presented by nature,” write designers Cali (The New Zen Garden) and Yasumoro in this highly detailed overview of 20 Japanese gardens. The authors begin with an introduction to Japanese gardening, outlining such fundamentals as digging a hole to determine drainage and soil content, and cover concepts including size variation in plants and other features (“three stones are never the same size”) to create perspective. The garden overviews that follow include a wealth of design schemata and background information about gardening’s history and religious philosophy: “A Garden for Lasting Relations” in Tokyo features Japanese sago palm trees, which are believed to “keep the devil away,” while in “Paradise in an Urban Jungle” the authors introduce the concept of shakkei, which means “borrowed scenery.” Then there’s “The Garden of Plum Blossoms and Students’ Prayers,” a garden near a famous shrine in Tokyo, which makes use of misogi, or purification by water. The lush photographs and encouraging tone are a boost: When Cali asks Yasumoro what one word defines the Japanese garden, Yasumoro answers, “Heart.” Fans of garden design will want to give this a look. (Dec.)