Animal Books
Related Subjects: Breeding Conditions and Diseases Drugs and Medications Pets Veterinary Medicine Alternative Medicine
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Oliver's mommyReview Date: 2007-04-10
Good book/buyReview Date: 2006-01-16
We LOVE, LOVE Fireman Small!Review Date: 2008-03-17
Great Fireman Book, Great Bedtime StoryReview Date: 2005-12-10
One small problem; Wong seems to have a unique sense of rhythm, which makes this harder to read aloud then you might expect; it took me a couple of readings before I felt that I had gotten it completely right. With practice, though, it flows beautifully.
My son loves it!Review Date: 2006-12-01

Used price: $14.98

Great book!Review Date: 2007-01-09
"Jaws" fallacies debunked!Review Date: 2006-02-15
A wonderful bookReview Date: 2005-03-24
Good shark book!Review Date: 2005-03-10
I think children as well as adults would enjoy this book. I wound up getting other people (who don't much care for the subject) interested in the pictures and short articles in this book.
Subjects treated include biology, geography, behavior, history, and interaction with man.
Good book about GWSReview Date: 2006-07-26


Sure to Spark Hugs and SnugglesReview Date: 2004-06-03
We were given the board book edition though...I sure wish we had got this edition as the Hare looks adorable.
30 May 2005
Reflecting on this review after more than a year, I can say that my "little jumper" isn't as keen on it as he was then...maybe in a few more months he'll start liking it again. I think he finds it a bit dull right now.
Guess How Much I Love YouReview Date: 2003-11-01
A must for babies everywhereReview Date: 2002-03-29
Beautiful, instant classic!!Review Date: 2001-09-22
Guess How Much We Love Little Nutbrown?Review Date: 2002-01-25
Thank You! so much Sam and Anita!!!
T.N.
Seattle,
WA

Collectible price: $139.00

oddly focusedReview Date: 2008-08-17
On the other hand, their are some useful bits in the book, so I can't say it is a total waste. As the number of books on this breed is limited, I suppose this book is worth reading.
One book I heartily recommend though is The Joyous Havanese, as I find it both more thoughtful and entertaining and repeatedly useful.The Joyous Havanese
The havaneseReview Date: 2008-03-29
Great book about a Great dog breedReview Date: 2008-05-25
The HavaneseReview Date: 2008-03-25
The HavaneseReview Date: 2007-12-23

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AWESOME message of Love, Hope, Healing and PeaceReview Date: 2008-10-04
This book is truly great, comforting and inspiring. Karen's passion for animals and their human companions comes through beautifully!
Thank you, Karen, for sharing so much of yourself and your experiences with everyone through this wonderful book! You've really helped to open my eyes as to what is possible, and the amazing Power of Love!
Peace,
Carol Mastro-Covington
Orange County, California
Huh ??Review Date: 2008-06-12
Just absolutely wonderful and inspirationalReview Date: 2008-08-08
I loved this bookReview Date: 2008-03-25
Very TouchingReview Date: 2008-01-15

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Amusing and EducationalReview Date: 2008-07-01
Laughed and criedReview Date: 2005-07-11
No such things as bad Kitties!Review Date: 2006-05-06
I laughed, I criedReview Date: 2006-04-02
Hiss and Tell: True Stories from the Files of a Cat ShrinkReview Date: 2005-07-27

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Add this to your Christmas collection!Review Date: 2008-02-12
A Classic!Review Date: 2007-11-19
LOVE it!Review Date: 2007-07-13
Witty writing and wonderful illustrations... fun for all!Review Date: 2007-06-25
I also recommend Mike Reiss' "Santa Claustrophobia" ; you will not be disappointed!
Not your ordinary Christmas TaleReview Date: 2005-12-17

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The How's, Why's, Where's, and Wonder of North & South American Bird Migration.Review Date: 2008-01-10
In three parts -Southbound, Hiatus, and Northbound- "Living on the Wind" examines the journeys of migratory birds, regales us with incredible stories of a variety of species, and tells us where they go and how they live in their wintering grounds. Weidensaul has endured the cold of Monterey Bay, tromped through Jamaica's acacia forests, counted the massive migration through Veracruz with blistered thumb, banded hawks in Argentina, stood in the midst of a "fallout" near the Gulf coast, and generally traversed North and South America to see and understand migrants. He recounts his experiences with a wonder and drama that made me long to visit some of these places myself.
We also learn of birds that stay in their frigid climates, irruptive species that migrate only occasionally, birds who migrate south to wintry Vermont, and some species for whom habitat transformation has meant overpopulation, such as snow geese and Canada geese. I found especially fascinating the discussions of how migratory birds navigate, differences in the needs and fates of neotropical migrants and resident birds that co-exist in the same habitats, and the very preventable threats to migrants, such as feral cats. I was struck by how much has been learned about migrants in the past couple of decades through new technologies and broader study, but also by how difficult it is to pin down definitive data about these itinerant creatures. "Living on the Wind" is a treasure trove of information for birdlovers and thoroughly enjoyable for a general audience as well.
Outstanding and thoroughly enjoyable popular science work on birds Review Date: 2007-06-16
The book is divided into three sections. "Southbound" focused on the fall migration as well as topics on migration in general.
Weidensaul stressed that one shouldn't view migration as moving away from something unpleasant, such as the cold, but rather as moving towards something beneficial, mainly an area where food is plentiful. Viewing migration as a simply north-south issue clearly shows a North American bias; birds in southern South America fly north to their wintering grounds, tropical birds fly relatively short distances but on migrations nonetheless in response to among other things the ripening of fruits or the blossoming of flowers, and many ocean birds undergo complex and intricate perambulations of entire oceans on an annual basis (the greater shearwater breeds in the South Atlantic but covers a 13,000 mile route every nine months, a route that includes going up past South America to Canada, then over to Europe in autumn, and then returning down the coast of Africa). Not all North American birds winter in the Americas; the bristle-thighed curlew nests in western Alaska but winters as much as 5,000 miles away in such Pacific islands as Tahiti, while the bar-tailed godwit winters 6,800 miles away from its Alaskan home in New Zealand (flying nonstop for up to five days).
The reader learns some birds are "complete migrants" (they entirely vacate their breeding grounds at the end of nesting season) and some are "partial migrants" (a portion of the population remains year-round). Most birds other than hawks migrate at night, partially to avoid predators (like hawks), to free up daytime hours for finding food, because the atmosphere is less turbulent at night, and because the chillier and damper night air can help cool overheated migrating birds and work to stem moisture loss. Thanks to human activity, many birds winter farther north than they once did, whether due to backyard birdfeeders in the case of finches or specially maintained refuges for waterfowl; this phenomenon is known as "shortstopping."
The author spent a good deal of time discussing how birds find their way on migrations. A fascinating discussion, migration involves a genetic program, a time of migratory restlessness when the daylight diminishes to a certain point and the urge to fly in a certain direction sets in, coupled in some species with a innate time-distance or time-and-direction (or vector navigation) program, a set of genetic instructions that instruct the bird to fly a certain direction for a specific length of time, change heading, and then precede on another for a preset period of time. Those directions are determined mainly by celestial and magnetic orientation but research has shown that infrasound (extremely low-frequency waves of the sort generated by ocean surf, which can travel for thousands of miles) may play a role as well.
Modifying this program though are a "hierarchy of orientation clues," which serve to refine a bird's navigation on subsequent flights, often enabling a bird to find specific breeding and wintering grounds with stunning accuracy. Clues such as learning geographic landmarks, olfactory, infrasound, and local magnetic clues help the migrating bird.
The second section, "Hiatus," focused on birds and their wintering grounds, from stay-at-home year-round resident birds alongside frozen Hudson Bay to birds of steamy rainforests and the Argentine pampas. Many birds like warblers and tanagers really are tropical birds to begin with; an oriole might spend four months in its temperate breeding range but seven months in the tropics, while some Canadian warblers spend less than three months there. Some birds migrate only as far south as southern Canada or the northern U.S. to winter. Others, such as the northern finches, follow an erratic and very unpredictable pattern of migration known as an irruption, a pattern tied to seed production in their normal range that in bad years may send birds as far south as the Gulf Coast.
The author discussed research on how faithful birds are to their wintering sites, debates over whether or not they are benefited by disturbed habitat, how flexible they are on their wintering grounds with regards to food and habitat, and how some species have completely different diets and habits on their wintering grounds (in some species the males and females will winter in different areas).
Threats to wintering birds were well discussed, covering such topics as the use of pesticides in Latin American countries (tens of thousands of Swainson's hawks have died from pesticides in Argentina), habitat destruction, changes in coffee-growing practices (shade-grown coffee plantations still have a great deal of habitat for birds but sun-coffee or technified farms are "biological deserts"), and disease (wetland destruction has forced waterfowl and shorebirds into overloaded federal and state refuges, what one researcher called "bird ghettos").
The third section, "Northbound," tracked the surge of migrants through the American Southwest, Great Plains, and the Gulf Coast. Topics of discussion often center on threats to migrating birds, including loss of hardwood forests along the Gulf Coast, a vital source of nutrients for migrating birds (increasingly usurped by industrialized pine plantations and beach homes), the loss of native grassland (a trend that is "nearly apocalyptic;" Iowa only has one-tenth of one percent left, while Minnesota has one percent left) which has caused grassland birds to decline faster, longer, and over a wider area than any other type, and the tremendous threats to breeding woodland birds due to forest fragmentation, opening up formerly deep woods to predators such as cats and also cowbirds, which are rapidly expanding their ranges and numbers and are a huge threat to eastern birds with no experience with brood parasites.
A keeper for birdersReview Date: 2007-04-16
I didn't begin to "bird" until my days in New Jersey (2000-2004) when I'd drive to the beautiful Jersey Shore and watch water fowl and migratory eagles, falcons and osprey nest along the banks of the braggish waters. I've been fascinated by raptors ever since, and the chapter "River of Hawks" had me longing for more.
The author traveled all over North and South America, mixing in some travelogue with his more scientific paragraphs. His descriptions of Patagonia, AZ (p. 59) and Monterey, CA (p. 93) were right on target even for the non-birder.
The time he spent researching, traveling, meeting with locals is astounding. He traveled to Mexico, Argentinia, Alaska, Canada, Jamaica and various places within the United States to watch the birds himself.
The book ends on a melancholy note, citing the need to preserve and conserve what natural habitat we have left in the world, not just for our feathered friends, but for fish and humans. No work on nature would be complete without a passage of hope that natural nesting areas and a habitat free of toxins will prevail.
This book is a must-read. Like a few other reviewers have stated, my only recommendation would be perhaps a picture, even a black-white picture, of the many birds mentioned in this book.
A Wonderful BookIReview Date: 2003-04-30
Vivid and poetic languageReview Date: 2004-11-10

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Super DelishReview Date: 2007-01-01
have I bought you this book yet?Review Date: 2002-01-13
Loved the recipesReview Date: 2003-09-08
The updated sections on fish and milk were very interesting, however, especially fish, which is touted today as a wonder-food for older people hoping to live longer. Many fish today arrive at your supermarkets having previously been mold-contaminated from sitting out in the open too long, and many contain high concentrations of Mercury, which also has been documented in a recent Reader's Digest article.
Just like what Marianne Williamson said on the front cover of this book: "I hope everyone reads this book!"
Third World issues/possible solutions addressed.Review Date: 2001-07-31
Some of this book is difficult to read because it makes us take a serious look and the way live, eat and purchase everyday items. I'm glad I did- it changed my life.
Becoming vegetarian or vegan is only part of the solution. Buy the book, read it, practice it, bring veg dishes to gatherings and share what you know. Buy the book as a gift too, that's how I got it.
I realize we have One Earth and One Chance- let's make it count. John Robbins can get you started on the right path.
May All Be Fed - Diet for a New WorldReview Date: 2001-11-06

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Photos with soul and feeling: youre there with all of them all the wayReview Date: 2008-05-30
Touching & Heart WarmingReview Date: 2008-01-09
Whenever I read about the 2 pit bulls trapped on the rooftop of a submerged car my eyes tear up. Who knows how long these 2 dogs were trapped on that roof, but when the one dog spotted the rescuers--who were in a rowboat due to the flooded streets--he was so desperate by then that he jumped into the water and swam the distance to the boat...which was quite a ways from his rooftop... he swam up to the boat, looked into the eyes of the photographer and just begged to be plucked out of the water, rescued and loved. He didn't even wait for them to get to him, he swam across the water just to get to them. I tear up everytime I think about that pitbull's desperation and feeling of abandonment.
Anyway, read the book. And I have to say that Best Friends is one of best organizations I've ever heard of. They do so much on behalf of animals and they are just a wonderful, wonderful organization. Buy the book and visit www.bestfriends.org! It can be a great coffee table book too.
MemoriesReview Date: 2007-02-01
Captures The Moment (and Piglet as the covergirl!)Review Date: 2007-02-28
I was also pleased to see that one of the dogs we cared for in the Back 40 in Tylertown whom we named "Piglet" turned out to be the covergirl on this book! She was always so happy to see us when we'd approach her kennel and loved to have suntan lotion rubbed all over her belly -- it is really something to see her story in detail before she came to us at Tylertown. The happy ending is that she was adopted by a family and now has a very happy forever home. :)
Very nice.Review Date: 2007-07-05
After Katrina hit, thousands upon thousands were forced to flee New Orleans and leave their pets behind. (The prevailing attitude of "we'll only be gone a few days, we'll leave a big bowl of food and some extra water" is reiterated here.) As the military worked on trying to get the city back into habitable condition and rescue any surviving people in the city, the best Friends Animal Society went to work trying to rescue the pets. Troy Snow, the group's photographer, documented the weeks they spent outside New Orleans, boating into the city every day to rescue animals that had been trapped by the flood. These are not happy fluffy bunny animal pictures, folks. If you prefer to think of your pooches as gamboling in the breeze, you might want to avoid this one. But Snow's pictures capture the dogged (pardon the pun) determination and will to live of the animals, and are a fitting tribute to their ability to survive. ****
Related Subjects: Breeding Conditions and Diseases Drugs and Medications Pets Veterinary Medicine Alternative Medicine
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