The Maple Book Corner
 Main Menu

  Home Page
  Our Links
  Reciprocal Links
  Feedback
  Search

  Top 50 Sellers

 Book Menu

  Best Sellers
  Arts & Photo
  Bargain
  Basement

  Biographies
  Business
  Children's
  Books

  Computers,
  Internet

  Cooking, Food
  Engineering
  Entertainment
  Health
  History
  Home & Garden
  Horror
  Law
  Literature,
  Fiction

  Medicine
  Michael Crichton
  Mystery,
  Thrillers

  Nonfiction
  Outdoors,
  Nature

  Parenting,
  Families

  Professional,
  Tech

  Reference
  Religion
  Romance
  Science
  Science Fiction
  Sports
  Star Trek
  Star Wars
  Stephen King
  Teens
  Travel
  True Crime
  Women's
  Fiction

  Women's
  Health

Keyword Search:
In Association with Amazon.com

A Field Guide to the Birds of Eastern and Central North America - Paperback

Buy Used/3rdParty

More product information

Find other editions
(Softback, Hardback, Audio, E-Book)

A Field Guide to the Birds of Eastern and Central North America

List Price: $19.95    Our Price: $13.57

You Save: 32%

Paperback - 04 April, 2002
Houghton Mifflin
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Author: Roger Tory Peterson, Virginia Marie Peterson
ISBN: 0395740460

Number of Media: 1

More books by Roger Tory Peterson


Similar Products

                      


Reviews From Our Customers

Absolute Rookie

I am new to 'birding' and am not necessarily taking it up as a hobby. However, this book has been superb at helping me to identify the birds I have seen around my house and in my area (the Chesapeake Bay). I cannot imagine that anyone will have difficulty using it.


A review for beginning birders (from one, gulp!)

When starting this hobby, there are an immense number of guides and (often expensive) resources to choose from.

This book should be the first one you buy (well, if you are in the eastern half of the US).

But it should not be the last. The Peterson Guide uses drawings (important -- NOT photos) to show you the typical features of the birds around you. Other great guides -- like the Audubon series -- use photos, but photos are harder for a beginner to use for a sure-fire identification. Or this beginner anyway...

No bird in the field looks exactly like the lovely Peterson drawing, but no two bird photos are ever alike, either (even of the same bird). Use the Peterson to get to know the bird species around you, and maybe next buy a guide like the Audubon Society Field Guide (just because -- I dunno, they seem like a one-two punch to me)! It's great to go looking with both, but if I had to choose one, it would be Peterson.

To learn more about birding in general, Sibley has a nice, shortish overview book called "Sibley's Birding Basics."

I'm only getting started, but this is some advice about what's helped in beginning to learn all this wonderful stuff about the living world all 'round.


The is the best bird guide book I've ever seen or owned!

I own a few bird books but this is the best and most handy one to identify a bird I'm not familar with. I love the arrows pointing to the areas for quick identification. It shows me what I should be looking for and sure helps when the bird won't stand still. The book is so light, I can have it on hand at all times. I even have it next to me in my own backyard. If you want a book to start out a new hobby of identifying birds, this is the one to get. Then start collecting from there. In fact, I'm considering buying another one for my car for spir-of-the-moment identification away from home and leave one at home for the backyard.

 

Amazon.Com prices and availability subject to change.