Jane Garmey, Photographer John M. Hall
Private Gardens of the Hudson Valley is
one of five books recently selected and featured
in the New York Times.
“Gardening Today” in the New York Times
See assorted reviews below.
The Brine Garden is one of twenty-six private gardens with chapters representing them in Private Gardens of the Hudson Valley (Monacelli Press). Each garden, depicted by photographer John Hall, establishes a sense of place and conveys the romance of its landscape. Author, Jane Garmey’s warm, insightful, and engaging narrative traces the development of the gardens and the pleasure of their owners’ involvement.
As Garmey notes in her introduction, each of these gardens has been made by the owner, and special attention given to the transition between the cultivated garden and the grandeur of the larger landscape beyond.
Private Gardens of the Hudson Valley is one of five books for garden lovers chosen by Alida Becker in the December 6th issue of the New York Times Sunday Book Review.
The Book Cove is an independent book store in the heart of the Village of Pawling, NY. For information call:
(845) 855-9590
Published by Monacelli Press, 2013
More Reviews:
“Contain your envy and trespass a bit further in Private Gardens of the Hudson Valley, Jane Garmey and John M. Hall’s follow-up to Private Gardens of Connecticut. The owners of these properties have serious horticultural credentials (one is president of the New York Botanical Garden, another is growing 250 kinds of peppers for her latest gardening book and hand-pollinates every one of her squashes), yet they can also be endearingly plain-spoken. ‘My aesthetic is on the messy side,’ confesses the owner of a Stanfordville garden whose ‘mess’ I’d gladly replicate. And how to resist this confession from the owner of an ‘in-town’ garden in Hudson who wasn’t around when his 22 tons of gravel were delivered, by mistake, to the house next door: ‘That was painful.’ There’s also some refreshing whimsy, thanks to the inventive woman from Salt Point who bought a gazebo kit, had it mounted on a platform with a motor and now floats it on her vast garden pond, ‘a marvelous venue for cocktails and sunset boat rides.’” —The New York Times Book Review
“The team behind 2010’s Private Gardens of Connecticut heads west to the wilder terrain of the Hudson Valley. Garmey notes that while English gardeners ‘have’ gardens, Americans ‘make’ gardens. That active verb reverberates as she details the creation of 26 distinctive private worlds, including Richard Jenrette’s stunning reinvention of Gore Vidal’s Edgewater estate and food writer Amy Goldman’s 220-acre vegetable empires. Halls’ sumptuous large-format photos seem to evoke the most beautiful season and time of day; one features an antlered buck posing pondside like landed gentry.” —Upstate House
“Writer Jane Garmey and photographer John M. Hall document the ways homeowners have shaped this lush area of rolling hills and dramatic vistas. Some gardens are naturalistic; others, like a Japanese-style circle of raked stone and boulders, seem almost surreal.” —Elle Décor
“Thumbing through this book, one almost forgets that the subject is Hudson Valley. The majority of the photographs are taken in the full-bloom of spring or as summer produce is on the vine, creating a perfect Eden free of the upstate winter months. Hall’s work walks through each garden so intimately that one can almost feel the warmth of the sunlight or the grass underfoot. Garmey’s prose introduces us to 26 landscapes, but she limits herself to only a few paragraphs. The stunning images hardly need qualification.” —Interior Design
“Twenty-six distinguished gardens found in the landscape that borders the Hudson River in New York. The extraordinary backdrop includes meadows along the river, hills and extensive valleys surrounding the properties. Each of the gardens introduced in this volume are created by the owners themselves and given careful attention to the transition between the refined garden and the majesty of the panorama beyond.” —Milieu magazine
“In Quaker Hill, a naturalistic garden was designed by Robin Zitter to go with the 18th century house. In Amenia, architect Gil Schafer hired noted landscape designer Deborah Nevins to help him create a series of enclosed gardens around the house. Some of these gardens were designed by their dedicated owners, others by professional landscape designers. Most of the gardens are quite traditional, with the exception of the very modern garden of Steve Trevor and Ronnie Planalp in Clinton Corners. Plentiful and beautiful photos by John M. Hall will give any reader plenty of ideas for design and plant combinations.” —Garden Design Online
“A beautiful new coffee table book. The twenty-six gardens are the creations of passionate, if not obsessive, gardeners. There are great estates like Edgewater, which is owned by the renowned American furniture collector Richard Jenrette, who purchased the property that juts into the Hudson River from the writer Gore Vidal in 1969. While most of the gardens were photographed in spring and summer, there are gorgeous autumn shots of Frederic Rich’s riverfront property in Philipstown, where he boldly sited a Zen garden in the woods.” —Rural Intelligence
“Reveals the hidden allées, flowering fields and sprawling vegetable plots of upstate New York’s most stunning outdoor spaces. When leafing through Private Gardens of the Hidden Valley, one is exposed not only to a wealth of verdant spreads but also to the tremendous amount of steady, patient human effort that goes into creating them. Garmey paints vivid portraits of the garden owners by describing their decision-making and sharing personal anecdotes. One of the best things about the book is its portrait of the 21st-century splendor of a region that has historically loomed so large in the American imagination—as the rugged, respondent paradise of the Hudson River School painters, and as the 19th-century rural hub of such high-society clans as the Vanderbilts and Rockefellers. Few places mix that kind of civility and rawness, and Garmey captures it well.” —1st Dibs Introspective
“A splendid book. . . . Garmey finds her subjects mostly through luck and word of mouth. She prefers gardens that belong to people who have been closely involved in the planning of their creations. She has also tried to present a full spectrum of landscape art, from the small, meticulous town garden of Richard Egan in Hudson to the sweeping landscape created by Susie and Bruce Kovner here in Millbrook.” —The Millbrook Independent
“Even for non-gardeners this is a delight of a book. Author, Jane Garmey, writes about 26 private gardens that appear to almost merge seamlessly into the surrounding countryside—its meadows, hills and valleys. Not to be outdone, garden photographer John M. Hall has captured and echoed Jane’s delightful prose with his clever and sometimes dreamy and ethereal pictures. . . . Beautifully produced and an absolute joy to peruse.” —The Foody Traveller