Where to Start with Barbara Pleasant
Barbara Pleasant has been writing about organic gardening and self-sufficient living for more than three decades. Her work spans vegetable gardens, composting, and indoor plants, always with a practical, no-nonsense approach grounded in real experience rather than theory. She is a contributing editor for Mother Earth News and the author of numerous gardening books. Her houseplant manual stands out because it treats indoor gardening with the same seriousness and depth that most authors reserve for outdoor growing, providing the kind of detailed, species-specific guidance that turns frustrated beginners into confident plant keepers.
Start here
The Complete Houseplant Survival Manual
Barbara Pleasant · 365 pages · 2005 · Easy
Themes: plant encyclopedia, troubleshooting, species profiles, comprehensive reference, plant identification
Pleasant’s definitive reference on keeping indoor plants alive. Over 160 species profiled with the kind of practical detail that generic care guides skip: what each plant actually needs, what commonly goes wrong, and exactly how to fix it.
Why Start Here
This is Pleasant’s most widely read book and the one that best showcases her approach: comprehensive, practical, and grounded in decades of real gardening experience. The manual is divided into three sections: flowering plant profiles, foliage plant profiles, and a general care encyclopedia covering topics from acclimatization to watering. Each plant entry includes personality profiles, growing needs, and troubleshooting tips.
The book works as a reference rather than a cover-to-cover read. When you bring home a new plant and need to know its specific requirements, or when an established plant starts showing distress signals, this is the book you pull off the shelf. Pleasant writes clearly and avoids both oversimplification and unnecessary jargon.
At 365 pages, it is one of the most thorough houseplant references available. While it was first published in 2005, the core botanical information remains accurate and useful because plants have not changed their fundamental needs in two decades.
What to Expect
A dense, practical reference guide. Over 160 plant profiles with specific care instructions. Extensive troubleshooting sections. Best used alongside a principles-first book rather than as light reading. The kind of book that becomes more valuable the more plants you own.