Ted Steinberg 's book "American Green" details the lawn and its role in the United States. He began talking about the history of the lawn from the origin of the word "lawn" in the 16th century and gave a wide anecdote through this book, trying to show readers the degree of American attachment to the lawn. His anecdotes usually means representing people gathering from the middle of America, but once you step backwards you can see that they are rare stories that have little meaning in fact.
Author Ted Steinberg's American Green: Forcibly pursuing a perfect lawn means that "I love it", but a lot of people at GR have given high marks to this work I noticed that. I think it is out of balance - basically in Steinberg's view, lawn = bad; natural / unintentional strip = good, the space between the two is small. Especially lacking is a fair presentation of the outlook of the lawn care industry. Some people will always be disappointed when they are interviewed or quoted
Ted Steinberg offers many reasons to abandon the lawn in his new book, "Green America: Forced pursuit of the lawn", but unfortunately he lacks a choice. Steinberg was a Zach researcher at Yale University's Environment Studies in 2006 and is also an author of two books and a large number of papers, and is also involved in the lawn industry, the influence of golf green on the landscape in the suburbs, and so on. He is also acknowledged as a lawn enthusiast, but he is also very contradictory about his small green. He believes that the golf course is creating the expectation of a perfect and soft glass carpet that the homeowner can not maintain reasonably. Since the tournament's tailoring time was only one-eighth inch, the sports announcer declared "wax them in a bikini without cutting them". Low grass cutting brings the need for shallow and fragile roots and unnatural water. , Fertilizers and pesticides
The rise of perfect lawn represents one of the most serious changes in American history. Witty revelation of this strange phenomenon of American Green, Ted Steinberg follows the history of the lawn of love from postwar suburban Levittown community to lawn colorants, leaf blowers and mowers' love