This should be the start of a really great enterprise: A cyclopedia of the woody plants of the world. This first installment includes, apart from some introductory chapters, the full treatment of about 40 species. On an average each species gets some eight pages of text, including a short general introduction, a fairly extensive description in which special attention is paid to wood, bark, rooting, flowers, fruits, and seeds; the seedling is often represented by a clear drawing; further are given notes on distribution, dispersal, ecology, culture, diseases, and uses. The text is illustrated with several often fine colour photographs depicting habit, bark, sometimes wood, leaves, flowers, fruits, and seeds, some drawings, and a map of the ar...