Suche books:   



Reader's Digest North American Wildlife
Editors of Readers Digest

Reader's Digest Books, 1982 - 559 pages

average customer review:based on 7 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here

   highly recommended  highly recommended



The best facts and pictures of any Wildlife book published.

This book has the best fact-filled text and color portraits of any I have read. It includes over 2,000 plants and animals of all types. It is easy to read and research because each section is color tabed. If you wont to exolore Wildlife you need this Book!!


A Good Field Guide

This is our first family field guide that we picked up at a used book sale. It is not comprehensive, but covers more than the basics well. The color illustrations are great and we have learned much from the book so far in the year that we've owned it.









 for more information click here


Excellent wildlife book

Excellent book on Wildlife in North American. The picture are very true of the real animal dipicted.


 for more information click here






Every Family Should Have This Book

Our family uses this book for identification of North American Wildlife -Animals - all the time. We live on a farm with a lake and have many different waterfowl, fox, beavers, deer and other animals visit our farm and we really enjoy looking up the animals to learn its' name, habitat and food requirements. Also as an artist I personally use the beautiful color drawings of the animals as a reference guide to correctly paint them.


If I could only keep one field guide with me, this would be IT....

My dad would occasionally bring me a book or two, saying "Kathy, I think you would enjoy this." He's been gone for 21 years now, and I have had to reglue sections of pages back onto the spine with PVA glue, but this little book remains the most valuable of all my huge collection of field guides. It has so many entries, and indexed by both common and scientific names; most importantly, the listings for each grouping are organized in a logical way, clustering similar species together so that you can easily find what you are looking for. One of my big gripes about some otherwise-helpful field guides is that there seems to be so little logic in their organization. This one is my favorite because it's not exhaustingly bulky. but so well-researched, that most of what you are likely to come across in your field wanderings will be found here - or you will at least have clues to locating it in a more detailed field guide in your library. They have illustrations of 34 native orchids, again, not comprehensive, but such a good representative sampling of the most-frequently found, and so well and carefully illustrated, that, again, I can give my full recommendation for this fine book. Thanks, Dad! : )


 for more information click here


reviews: page 1, 2



Detailed, specially drawn full-color illustrations of 230 species of mammals, 300 reptiles, and 200 amphibians in natural, realistic settings. At-a-glance identification capsules pinpoint behavior patterns, field characteristics, coloring, habitat, and more.



hot or not?    What's your opinion?     Write a review and share your thoughts!





american

The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression
Extreme Measures: A Thriller
A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity
Living Dead in Dallas (Southern Vampire Mysteries, Book 2)
The Brass Verdict: A Novel



wildlife

The Great Minnesota Fish Book
Out on the Porch Calendar 2009 (Wall Calendars)
If I Ran the Zoo (Classic Seuss)
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, Fifth ...
Fairy Houses ... Everywhere! (The Fairy Houses Series) (The Fairy ...



reader

Uncle John's Triumphant 20th Anniversary Bathroom Reader (Uncle Johns ...
The Lace Reader: A Novel
What Really Matters for Struggling Readers: Designing Research-Based ...
Uncle John's Unsinkable Bathroom Reader (Uncle John's Bathroom Reader)
The Uncommon Reader: A Novella



search for books
reader's digest, american, digest, north, reader, wildlife


Impressum / about us


Suche books: