Field Books


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Field Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Field
Depth of Field
Published in Hardcover by Xlibris Corporation (2000-10-23)
Author: Sylvia N. Pointer-Emery
List price: $34.99
Used price: $10.00

Average review score:

great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-24
I enjoyed it, 400 pages is usually a lot for me to but it was a fast read. I laughed and cried.

A cover can be deceiving
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-17
My girlfriend got me to read this book, at first I didn't want to because one look at the cover I said Aw hell, another male-bashing book! After getting into it, I was pleasantly surprised. Two thumbs up, Sylvia!

this is one for the boys
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-17
Pretty good story, my girlfriend told me about Depth of Field and how it relates to us fathers especially fathers of daughters to own up! I enjoyed it.

Read it over the weekend
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-15
I like the fact that there are good men out there, I think of my own father.

Enjoyable
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-23
I related to Noelle and a few others in this book, it should be a movie

Field
Digital Travel Photography Digital Field Guide
Published in Paperback by Wiley (2006-06-06)
Author: David D. Busch
List price: $19.99
New price: $6.00
Used price: $4.00

Average review score:

great photo guide
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-12
Very informative, detailed, user friendly, you don't need to be photo pro to read this. I have learned a most from this one compare to another books. Read it, make notes and hit the field for some great pics.

Another great field guide
Helpful Votes: 35 out of 36 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-10
I used this author's D50 field guide to learn to use my Nikon camera. Now, just when I am ready to set out on a dream vacation with my family, he comes out with this guide aimed especially at those taking vacation or travel photographs.

I must admit that I like this one even better than the D50 book, mostly because 1/3 of it is NOT taken up with explanations of how to use camera controls. This book is chock full of great travel tips, how to prepare for your trip, how to equip your camera, and valuable information on maximizing storage, etc. Like the other book, most of its content deals with techniques for taking great pictures, but these are all travel oriented. The author works through several dozen different kinds of photo opportunities and offers recommendations for settings and how to approach the shot. Well worth studying before the trip, and including in your backpack, purse, or camera bag while you travel.

The Ultimate Travel Photography Book
Helpful Votes: 35 out of 36 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-03
It's amazing how much essential information is contained within the covers of this compact guidebook. It's filled with shrewd advice on working with digital cameras of all types, from simple point and shoot models through advanced digital SLR cameras. Even if you already know how to operate your camera, you'll find lots of tips on coping with special problems you'll encounter in travel photography situations.

This is a full color book with beautiful photos on every page, all of them of a type that the reader can aspire to after reading the advice in the guide. I especially appreciated the format of this book, which was small enough to tuck in a camera bag and take with you. Take it with you on every trip you take. I know I will.

A well thought-out travel guide for today's photographer.
Helpful Votes: 46 out of 46 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-30
This is my fifth photography book in the past year, and I'm getting to be a bit of an expert on them! (joke). This is the first book that I have seen that is intended for the digital photographer who is planning a trip.

David assumes some photographic knowledge, but covers some of the basics anyway. I won't go into that. Where this book excels is in teaching how to prepare for a photo-safari trip, or just how to maximize on a regular vacation. How to take photos that don't look like the typical tourist shots. What to pack. What not to. And how to learn to take good travel photos by using your home area in a series of homework assignments. "Digital Travel Photography" covers technique for landscape photography, nature, portraits (that don't look posed), and even planning a photo-vacaton to cover local annual events.

Although David recommends packing this book as a filed guide, I don't equate it to the bird and nature guides that are pocketable. High marks for content and abundant color illustration.

VERY USEFUL BOOK
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-10
i am an ameteur photographer that is trying very hard to understand a manual digital camera. i want to learn to take better pictures and use the manual features on my camera instead of the auto all the time. i have read many many photography books (probably 25 to 30 in the last 3 years). many go on way too long about how to select a camera - i don't think a book should cover that - cameras change too much from month to month and a good camera store should be able to steer you in the right direction. and, the books spend the last half covering how to change your photos on adobe. well, not everyone uses adobe. no matter what program you use, get a book on that. so, i loved this book, didn't delve into these two subjects too much. i can finally start to get a grasp of f stops and lighting and all that. my pictures have finally started to improve and i can understand what the book is saying. most other books i've read are either WAY to basic, too many or not enough pictures, too detailed for me to understand, etc. this book is perfect! i am learning a lot but it's not so far out there that i need to take a college course to understand the language used!

Field
Eastern Birds' Nests (Peterson Field Guides)
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin Company (2001-02)
Author: Houghton Mifflin Company
List price:

Average review score:

Peterson Field Guides: Eastern Birds' Nests
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-18
This little book is enormously helpful in identifying birds' nests and eggs. It is an easy read and very informative. Would recommend to all who are interested in birds and birding.

Not Many Like This Out There
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-10
This is a highly recommended book for identifying bird's nests. It's amazing to see all the different types of nests that birds make. These creatures have true workmanship. It must have been a great challenge for the photographer(s) to find and photograph all the different nests throughout this fascinating book. You don't see many books out there on the market like this, so I recommend it.

Excellent for bird watchers
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
I was giving a class on monitoring bluebird boxes and I needed to show people the nests of predators and other birds that use the bluebird boxes. I wanted people to be able to see the difference between the nests built by bluebirds as compared to house sparrows, for instance. Also, I needed to show the different colors of eggs.

This book was absolutely essential for this. Once examining the photos in the book and reading the text, people were easily able to identify the different kinds of nests that had been built in the boxes we were monitoring.

How did they do this?
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-28
I discovered this book while doing coursework at a teacher institute in northern Wisconsin. Like many amateur naturalists, finding an egg that has fallen from a nest is a momentous event, but I wasn't always sure of the bird that laid that egg. While I still might need to actually connect the actual bird with the egg visually, this guide goes a long way toward narrowing my choices.

A list of characteristics, such as oval, long and short pyriform shape, is clearly illustrated in a chart on the endpaper, accompanied by a ruler for measuring in the field. Most incredible to me are the photographs of bird nests in site containing typical egg clutches. Anyone who is a birder knows that these nests are very often difficult to access, as high as 80 feet up a tree! For the photographers to have not only located, but photographed, all these nests is nothing short of remarkable--and helpful. Detailed descriptions accompany the photos. The book is arranged in taxonomic order, making it easy for those of us used to this arrangement.

The average birdwatcher will probably be happy with a basic field guide to identify birds by sight. For those of us who always need "just one more field guide," this guide to nests is a unique addition to that ever-growing library.

Very Helpful
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-15
We used this book as part of a homeschool/4H project to identify nests that we had found on our property. Using the detailed nest descriptions, photographs of the nests, and sketches of the birds (along with our pocket guide to Wisconsin birds) we had a great time identifying our nest collection. The book's organization makes it easy to narrow down the identification possibilities.

Field
Engineering Electromagnetics
Published in Hardcover by Springer (2007-08-01)
Author: Nathan Ida
List price: $149.00
New price: $98.60
Used price: $97.95

Average review score:

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-22
I recently bought Engineering Electromagnetics (second edition) by Nathan Ida. It has since become my favourite book on the subject, along with Field and Wave Electromagnetics (second edition) by Cheng. I own six electromagnetics books, of which the two best known are the one by Cheng (aforementioned) and Electromagnetics with Applications by Kraus (sixth edition). I now compare these three books, referring to them as Ida, Cheng, and Kraus.

Firstly, all three books are good. All three are of similar level, suitable for EE undergraduates. (Ida and Cheng use matrices wherever appropriate, but Kraus never uses matrices, not even to simplify the discussion.) All three books display personal enthusiasm for the subject-matter. For example, Ida provides many interesting historical footnotes.

Secondly, Ida has 1235 pages whereas Cheng has 703 and Kraus has 617. It is tempting to attribute this to the fact that Ida tends to explain things with more words (something which I appreciate), but this is not the case because this would not account for more than 10 percent of the total book size. The true reason for the book's length is the in-depth discussion of theory, and the many many applications of the theory. In effect, it combines the best of Cheng (which is good for principles) and the best of Kraus (which is okay for applications). Ida actually far exceeds Kraus in many important applications, e.g. transformers, Smith chart, and numerical methods for boundary-value problems.

Thirdly, all three books are generous in providing answers to end-of-chapter problems. Ida goes one step further by giving answers to ALL problems except a handful of discussion-type questions. Moreover, the problems are categorized under headings so that you can zero in on an area of interest. For example, the chapter on antennas has 36 problems, categorized under the following boldface headings: Hertzian dipole (4 problems), magnetic dipole (2), linear antennas of arbitrary length (2), half-wave dipole antenna (2), various length dipole antennas (3), monopole antenna (5), two-element image antennas (6), n-element linear array (6), reciprocity and receiving antennas (4), and radar (2).

It is noteworthy that most the Amazon.com reviewers say that this is the best book ever on electromagnetics. I am inclined to agree with them.

Great!!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-29
It's a greatest book that I have ever read on Electromagnetics.
It will be very competible with the Book of Balanis named Advanced Engineering Electromagnetics.
Really Great.

The best book on Electromagnetics
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-26
This is really the best book on electromagnetics I've seen until now. It is very complete and very practical. The author has a clear style and the students can follow the text almost without any help from the teacher. There are a lot of review questions and problems (all with answers). It is really a great value book !

The best book on Electromagnetics
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-25
This is really the best book on electromagnetics I've seen until now. It is very complete and very practical. The author has a clear style and the students can follow the text almost without any help from the teacher. There are a lot of review questions and problems (all with answers). It is really a great value book !

Probably the best undergrad-level electromagnetics book ever
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-10
This is a very, very good text for students new to electromagnetics. Mr. Ida uses lengthy, descriptive narratives to describe the important concepts in introductory field theory, and he goes the extra mile in making sure the student understands what these concepts mean. He accomplishes this through exemplary conceptual discussions and a collection of excellent example problems. His thoroughness justifies the 1200 page length of the text.

There is really nothing bad to say about this book, besides that the figures are obviously drawn by Mr. Ida or an assistant and are occasionally more difficult to read than figures drawn by a professional illustrator. In several examples, it also appears that the students solving the problems for Ida used a table of integrals instead of integrating the functions themselves; in several examples this resulted in more work than would have been required by straightforward integration methods.

Field
Environment
Published in Paperback by Saunders College Publishing (1998-03)
Authors: Charlene Waggoner and Raven
List price: $38.50
New price: $15.00
Used price: $0.43

Average review score:

Great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-09
Awesome book. I enjoy reading it. It's easy to read and very comprehendable. It's good information!

Excellent Service
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-29
I ordered this book and received it very quickly. The book came in new condition as described. Thanks!

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
The book arrived ahead of schedule and it was in mint condition. I am satisfied with the service and the product.

Great Purchase
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-02
I am happy with the purchase that I Made. It was delivered on time and was in great shape.

Excellent Book for Introduction to Environmental Science
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-17
I was asked to evaluate ths for the textbook selection committee at a local high school for possible use as the text book for an environmental science class next year. Since my degree is in Environmental Science, and I have done a lot of work with environmental education, I have read a large number of environmental science books and have seen the good, bad and worst of books on the market.

At first I just planned to skim the book, but after reading a few pages I decided to look at the book more closely, and I was impressed with what I saw. The book is well written in clear, easy to understand language, using a good amount of well done graphs, charts and photos. The layout, in addition, was good, making the book flow in an orderly manner.

The information in the book was excellent, and covered the entire range, as much as is possible in one book, of environmental science. The biology and chemistry were integrated nicely and flowed smoothly.

I have rated this book as four stars only because I feel the authors didn't cover the section on renewable energy as well as I would have liked. The book tended to move through the subject rather quickly, offering only a limited view of what can be done to eliminate the use of fossil fuels. In all other ways this book was superior to many I have read.

I would highly recommend this for an introduction course in college, and also think it would bean excellent choice for a text at the AP or regular high school level, provided the students had enough science background to be able to understand the science. I even believe that a motivated home schooled student could study from this book and do quite well in the subject. Overall, one of the best introductory text books I've had the pleasure of reading.

Field
Falconry Manual
Published in Paperback by Hancock House Pub Ltd (1984-01)
Author: Frank Beebe
List price: $17.95
New price: $17.95
Used price: $75.17

Average review score:

Excellent Overview
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-11
I found this book to be an excellent overview of Falcony. It has a good section describing the different types of raptors suitable for the sport, and some interesting descriptions and drawings relating to training and equipment. However, I would not attempt to use this book as a "how-to" manual. It doesn't have nearly enough detail on any subject. In places it can be a little difficult to follow. I am pleased with my copy and will be happy to add it to my library.

Very useful
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-22
This is a great little book. Frank Beebe packs all the essential information around hawk training into this book, drawing on decades of practical experience and research. Beebe writes with the authority of someone who has actually practised what he is preaching, rather than some authors who seem to have written a falconry book for the sake of personal aggrandizement. He also writes in excellent English, almost with an academic eloquence.

He deals with all three classes of falconry birds: buteos, accipiters and falcons, and draws very useful comparisons between them on temperament, character and hunting application.

Note however that the book is mostly a training manual, and with the exception of a very interesting chapter on the history of falconry regulation in the US, it about trapping, furniture and hunting. If you want a book with detail on hawk care, dog training, breeding and housing then choose another one (I recommend Emma Ford's for all except breeding and dogs, Nick Fox's for the former and Diana Durman-Walters' for the latter). Note also that its a North American text - the chapters on trapping and bagged quarry are of no use to a UK falconer.

SOARS!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-25
This is an excellent book for people who are intrested in falconry. At one time falconry was the sport of the noble gentry. This book does a real service in describing these intelligent, beautiful birds of prey and how falconers work with them.

A must have for prospective falconers.

Excellent for Beginners
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-18
This book has very good information for beginners who are a little confused. A very good profiling on individual species. Also good section on equipment. I found it very informative and worthwhile the price.

A great beginners book.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-12
I am relatively new to the world of falconry. As a result, I am reading just about everything I get my hands on. Frank Beebe is an undisputed master on the subject of falconry. I found that Mr. Beebe's style of writing, presents the information in a very easy to read & understand format. After having read this book, it convinced me that I should order his major work entitled "A Compleat Falconer". I am certain that it is most probably "The Bible" for falconry. An excellent book by an excellent author.

Field
Fallow's Field
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2007-09-17)
Author: Dennis McKay
List price: $14.95
New price: $7.28
Used price: $7.23

Average review score:

Fallow's Field
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
An excellent read. The author obviously thoroughly researched his subject, which results in an informative and entertaining novel. Highly recommended!!

Fallow's Field--a captivating read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
Fallow's Field is a captivating story about Ned Fallow, a youngster who lives on a Ketchum, Texas farm. His character is molded by a grandfather who must replace Ned's father and uncle who die during a devastating storm. His grandfather's death and more misfortunes cause Ned to become a dedicated loner. When his mother, an aunt and close cousin move away, Ned strikes out on his own. He arrives in Midland, Kansas where he throws himself into becoming the best wheat farmer in a land of wheat farmers--not an easy task. Dedicated to shielding himself from life's slings and arrows, Ned rebuffs any close relationships. He throws himself into proving to the world that he is the best at doing whatever he undertakes. In spite of his chosen life style, he realizes belatedly that it is impossible for anyone to succeed without accepting help from others during trying situations. A metamorphosis of sorts transforms Ned's character, which results in his finding true friendships, companionships and love.
Dennis McKay, the author, proves himself to be a superb storyteller, which is the primary job of a fiction writer. In doing so, he has done extensive research into all areas about which he writes. I was born and grew to manhood on a farm in Oklahoma. Growing wheat was one of the crops my family planted, nurtured, prayed for, and harvested. McKay tells it like it was. I recommend, Fallow's Field. It is a superb read.
Fredrick W. Boling
Author of Wakan Man and Incident at Crazy Woman Creek.

Fallow's Field
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-05
The author brought to me the day to day living experience of a generation of people who through hard times, be it the weather or personal sacrifice,
endured these hardships. It also showed how one man, locked into his own world, finds by opening up a beautiful world around him that he was missing. I will be looking forward to reading the author's next book.

Historical Fiction and a "Great Read"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-01
I really enjoyed reading "Fallow's Field" because it incorporated both of the elements that I look for in new books - historical fiction and just a "great read". This was a book that I felt compelled to keep reading to find out "what happens next" while learning about early Kansas wheat farming at the same time.

Americana
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-01
This book was rich in detail and the characters were woven through the story and Ned's life with care>I stayed up late reading this one.

Field
A Field Guide for the Sight-Impaired Reader: A Comprehensive Resource for Students, Teachers, and Librarians
Published in Kindle Edition by Greenwood Press (1999-12-30)
Author: Andrew Leibs
List price: $66.95
New price: $53.56

Average review score:

provides the key to 5 star service
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-29
"Comprehensive" starts the subtitle, and Comprehensive it is! Too many print-handicapped people are forced to stumble through the multi-layered service system, picking up clues almost by accident until they "strike gold" in the person of a skilled counselor or librarian. Here is a full set of Tools for Learning, along with a user's guide! Important for every visually impaired student and family, vital for every school or school system's Special Education department. No less useful for those with serious learning disorders like dyslexia, or with challenging physical disabilities that prevent the easy handling of printed material. Yes, addresses and phone numbers may change; new organizations may develop; but this is a book that will be USED and that will repay its purchase many times over.

Praise for the Field Guide from an 85 year old reader
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-24
A volunteer at VISION Community Services, A Division of the Massachusetts Association for the Blind, a lovely 85 year old who is legally blind and severely hearing impaired, mentioned that she was interested in the Guide (as the result of reading a review in our newsletter). I loaned her our library copy and here's what she had to say: "Spent several hours with the Field Guide. Every low vision person should have access to it. One bonus I reaped was a comprehensive description of major suppliers, what they supply and differences between them. Also, Leibs gave a useful assessment of assistive devices. This is bewildering to the newcomer to the field. In the end, I copied out several titles of Great Books to improve my mind. Several times I've tried Huckleberry Finn and quit in boredom. On the other hand, the Toni Morrison title caught my attention, I've been meaning to sample her. Don't expect to like it, but I might be surprised." She adds that it was also good to know the approximate cost of having a book reprinted in large print, and the major LP companies. Despite being legally blind, her vision is better than her hearing so she reads large print books. Her vision loss is due to glaucoma, so she retains some decent central vision.

Better Than a Compass
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-15
This book is the "needle of a compass" for the blind and dyslexic. Kudos to Leibs for providing the best resource guide for the blind and dyslexic I've read! He's not only gathered countless resources and provided those in an easy to navigate format, but he's added his own personal struggles and discoveries that finally lead him to experience the sheer joy of reading. I've placed this book in a prominent location in my office and will refer to it often as it's truly the work of a research genius. Special attention should be paid to the Introduction as Leibs takes you on a poignant journey to his discovery of reading and shares his excitement as well as disappointment while uncovering the bliss of reading. Additionally, Leibs provides a "suggested reading" list with contact information on how and where to acquire these books. Truly, his passion for reading will no doubt inspire your own, whether you are a fully sighted reader or not. Kudos to Leibs! A gem of a book, and long overdue!

NOT Another �how to live with a disability� Book . . .
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-22
I picked up this book for the first time a few nights ago and was immediately hooked. As a legally blind consumer and as Director of Rehabilitation Services at an agency whose mission is to empower blind and visually impaired individuals, I was immediately moved by the significance of Mr. Leibs' work. I read late into the night, and my last thought before drifting off to sleep that night was that I wished that this book had been around 30 years ago -- it would most certainly have saved me and a lot of others who live with severe vision impairment or blindness a whole lot of struggle and grief!

This book is the only of its kind I've encountered. The information, both concisely and engagingly presented, opens a breathtaking vista of literature and learning to the lives of the visually impaired in providing guidance to independent access of the printed word!

This book is NOT another "how to live with a disability" book. It focuses on a very important aspect of life, the ABILITY to read, to INDEPENDENTLY access the written word. Leibs has put together an extensive listing of resources to empower the visually impaired reader. In addition, the personal experiences he shares in the book brought back a host of memories of my own educational odyssey. Like Leibs, I and many others with low vision have experienced much hit-and-miss in the process of learning what we needed to know to gain the access we desire and need to succeed. Leibs has put together all the pieces of a complex puzzle into a user-friendly guide that paves the way for others to learn the rudiments of what it takes to access our literary world!

In my opinion, this book should be put into the hands of every visually impaired child in this country. Leibs also targets librarians with this work, as their awareness of these resources may enhance their own knowledge and skills in providing support for visually impaired consumers. I would additionally recommend this book to seniors who constitute, by far, the largest population of visually impaired readers.

Many thanks to Mr. Leibs for a significant contribution to the education and quality of life of blind and visually impaired people!

A reader from Upstate New York
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-23
This book should be in the hands of every sight-impaired student no later than age tweleve. Leibs has completely overhauled the orientation for reading among the blind from one of dependence on teachers and organizations to one of connecting INDEPENDENTLY to a really vast array of resources. This hardcover volume is quite easy to navigate - well designed and quite "user friendly".

Field
A Field Guide to Getting Lost
Published in Hardcover by (2005-07-07)
Author: Rebecca Solnit
List price: $21.95
New price: $6.49
Used price: $5.70

Average review score:

Solnit is insightful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-13
Rebecca Solnit has created what is in my mind what we all seek. Peace. In the notion of accepting that we are all "Lost", and that is where we are meant to be she has captured what the human condition is. Her prose is exceptional and thick. Her attachment to the natural world is a beacon of light in a society that is truly hopelessly lost. Lost from what is real. Brilliant work


Ken Wylie

Calgary Canada

Rationality and Mystery
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-12
The first question is, what is a field guide to getting lost? Field guides help us with finding, not losing or getting lost. We use them to classify the unfamiliar and figure out what surrounds us. They reassure us that the bewildering array of natural phenomena has an underlying order. Solnit's title suggests we might also want our schemas to break down. Can we catalogue the various ways of getting lost as we might catalogue songbirds? The paradox feels whimsical, mocking, alluring. Like the title, the tone of the book will hover between the urge to know and the urge not to know, between rationality and mystery.

In the middle of the first chapter, Solnit gives us a manifesto: "Never to get lost is not to live, not to know how to get lost brings you to destruction." "Lost," for her, means we lack a narrative for what we are experiencing. Getting lost is a kind of Zen rebirth because "to be lost is to be fully present, and to be fully present is to be capable of being in uncertainty." Getting lost also has connotations of spiritual longing. Solnit titles every other chapter "The Blue of Distance." Blue "represents the spirit, the sky, and water, the immaterial and the remote, so that however tactile ansd close-up it is, it is always about distance and disembodiment." Voila the tone of the book--grand, abstract, sensual, yearning and inexorably aloof.

With a topic like the beauty of longing and loss, it is surprising how rarely Solnit lapses into cliché. Her prose is as smooth and bare as polished stone. It creates the feeling of waking from a dream and encountering the world, dazed and receptive. If Thoreau is the most cerebral of the philosopher-poets and Whitman the most sensual, Rebecca Solnit belongs at the midpoint. She does not allow herself academic verbal tics, or excess verbiage, but neither does she shy away from the syntactical complexity of acadmic writing. She integrates lyric sensuality and philosophizing as if these modes belong together, as if western civilization had never tried to separate mind and body. I admire her poise and authority a little as I admire Susan Sontag's. Solnit's is a supremely self-possessed voice, which may be the same thing as a voice that has abandoned the antic whining of the self. She draws deeply on experience, yet she resists the confessional mode.

You might say that Solnit offers an optimistic way to confront the globalized, alienated world of the twenty-first century, a sort of "If God gives you lemons, make lemonade," or "If God gets you lost, revel in it." You could argue that she offers a sophisticated alternative to the self-help genre, though I imagine Solnit would look down on self-help. She likes slipperiness and paradox too much. Still, she is interested in finding a way forward for the soul, and I, for one, am glad because my little soul is often bewildered.

I think Solnit dances between lostness and foundness. She notes that "nomads have fixed circuits and stable relationships to places," and her own wandering through the west is ritualized, repetitive. She doesn't need to go to Antarctica; she gets lost in America. Her home territory is simply vast and ambitious, her spirals broad. Still, in order to lose herself time after time, she has to find herself in between.

Connections, ancestry, history, and modern culture in a personal odyssey of exploration
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-07
Rebecca Solnit's A Field Guide To Getting Lost discusses experience and getting lost in the everyday, examining how people move from cities to wilderness, how they search for sense of self in an uncertain life, and how her own explorations in the world have changed her life. At once an autobiography and introspective examination, A Field Guide To Getting Lost surveys connections, ancestry, history, and modern culture in a personal odyssey of exploration.

Reigning Queen of the Essay.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-10
With a prodigious breadth and fearless depth, she takes the segue to a high art. Anything can be the occasion for connection. Any sentence can break your mind or heart wide open. Her most personal, and my personal favorite. Reading this book makes me feel alive.

Mesmerizing
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-12
A mesmerizing book that is three separate tales told at the same time. At times humorous and sometimes it made me want to cry, this story was hard to put down. I would highly recommend it.

Field
A Field Guide to Little-Known and Seldom-Seen Birds of North America
Published in Paperback by Peachtree Publishers (1988-11)
Authors: Ben Sill, Cathryn Sill, and John Sill
List price: $9.95
New price: $150.00
Used price: $0.35
Collectible price: $34.99

Average review score:

Humorous birding book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-13
I love writers like the Sills, who can write with humor, tongue-in-cheek comments, and illustrate with equally supurb drawings. Even my husband laughed, and he usually doesn't pick up such books. The Sills take a serious topic - at least most birders I know seem so serious about their "lists" - and turn it into a very fun read. (I plan to use it in language arts classes this year for examples of many literary terms, especially alliteration.)

Subtle and intelligent humor
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-11
This book was not written for bird watchers, but for those people who are looking for subtle and intelligent humor. The authors start with the characteristics of birds and then add features of other items. My favorite bird was the White-Lined Roadrunner or Geococcys Alba-linearis, whose habitat is a series of interstate highways, primarily in the southwest United States. The last two sentences in the description are "Feet have a unique radial tread pattern. Environmental noise can obscure the call, which is an occasional beep."
Each bird is given English then "Latin" names, followed by a description, and then hints for better observation. You must read the descriptions carefully to catch all of the subtlety of the humor, but if you do, it will amuse you.

Praise from SE Alaska
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-11
I have been a fan of these exquisite little bird guides since I first stumbled on volume 1 at Hearthside Books in Juneau, Alaska in 1988. At that time, I decided to purchase a raft of these guides and they became excellent gifts for other lovers of wildlife over the years.

Since then I have passed both volumes around to our guests when I do tours as a naturalist in Haines, (SE) Alaska. The drawingsare so realistc, even the Elderhostlers think they are real birds...and laugh as they figure out the joke...Highly recommended for all those with a sense of humor and love of birds. Thank you Sills!!!!

Hysterically funny spoof of field guides
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-03
I highly recommend this book as a gift for any birder. Anyone who has attempted to find a way to tell a "greater" from a "lesser" or who has tried to learn those hard to recall Latin names will appreciate it!

The Perfect Antidote
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-22
I have been afflicted with Serious Birders Disease. You know the symptoms, flitting from Peterson to Stokes to Sibley and beyond, memory fading. Was it a yellow bill, blue legs, black feet or was it black bill, yellow feet? It gets worse and worse with each passing hour. They all begin to look alike. I was becoming frantic.

Finally a friend came to the rescue with the best antidote yet - the little field guide by Ben, Cathryn and John Sill "A Field Guide to Little-Known & Seldom-Seen Birds. Symptoms disappear within 24 hours. Laughter, after all, is the best medicine. Never again will I venture into the field with quite the same driven attitudes - unless, of course, I think I have finally happened upon the elusive ringed gimpy (see pp 26-27).


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