The pamphlet describes effects of distribution pattern, modernism, and topography in landscape. In the first chapter, David Leatherbarrow mentioned that there are four ways to distinguish the larger landscape by gardens: horizontal distance; vertical distance; geographical distance; and technological distance. In the second chapter, Martha Schwartz indicates that art form relate to other visual arts could serve cultural artifacts to express contemporary culture’s values with modern materials. In the last chapter, David Leatherbarrow shows the dialogue between architecture and landscape creates a poetic area where the topography is not a abstraction in a design or site. The writing of wandering, listening and language Lexicon words are related to the top of effects of distribution pattern, modernism, and
topography in landscape.