Field Books
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Used price: $19.00
Collectible price: $29.95

One of the few, and one of the best.Review Date: 2001-07-15
How to start photographing the heavensReview Date: 2003-01-09
Chapters:
1. Introduction to Wide-Field Astrophotography
2. Piggyback Techniques Add Versatility
3. Cameras for Wide-Field Astrophotography
4. Lenses for Wide-Field Astrophotography
5. Filter Characteristics
6. The Schmidt Camera
7. Film Choices and Characteristics for Astrophotography
8. Guiding and Polar Alignment
9. Meteor and Comet Photography
10. Accessories for Wide-Field Astrophotography
11. Film Hypersensitization
12. Chemical Darkroom for Astrophotography
13. Darkroom Tricks
14. Problems in the Real World
15. Digital Image processing and Printing
16. Build-It-Yourself Projects
17. Our Astrophotographic Legacy
A. Suppliers and Other Information
B. Developer Formulas
C. 45 Unhypered Films Compared for Astrophotography
D. Popular Astrophotography Films
Bibliography
Index
If you are interested in detailed imaging of the planets with a digital camera or CCD astroimager, then this is not the book for you. But if you want to capture huge swaths of the Milky Way or take pictures of the constellations, then this is the best book available to give you your start. All the photos in this book are reproduced in black and white, but most of them were taken using black and white film. This book is appropriate for all levels from beginners to advanced astrophotographers, but its organization may make it a little inconvinient for an absolute beginner to find the information needed to get started, but it is a great reference for the intermediate, advanced, and serious hobbyist astrophotographers.
Practical info for novice to expertReview Date: 2001-11-03


Another great bookReview Date: 2007-01-16
FantasticReview Date: 2000-05-24
A Wild book on Wild WhalesReview Date: 2000-05-25
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $19.50

Wing for My FlightReview Date: 2008-04-24
Wings For My FlightReview Date: 2002-12-07
(Wings for My Flight is still in print by Pruett Publishers.)
Heartwarming story about Peregrine FalconsReview Date: 1999-10-09

Used price: $8.58

Real Baseball, Real PeopleReview Date: 2008-05-20
Unique and FascinatingReview Date: 2008-04-27
I would recommend this book to anyone interested in readking about baseball from a different perspective. If Studs Terkel had written a baseball book, this is probably what it would have read like.
easy to read; would appeal to me or to a baseball fanatic Review Date: 2008-04-05
My favorite interviews were the ballpark architect, the umpire, the shortstop who goes to art galleries when he travels around the US, and the "from Connecticut" ticket hustler.
I like that I can read one interview at a time or several in a row.
This would be a good gift for any man. I will keep it in mind for the impossible-to-shop-for 15-25 year old. It also strikes me as a good graduation gift because everyone in the book talks about how they came to have that job.
I am female 32 years with limited interest in pro sports...

Used price: $37.64

One of the best books on Track and Field World Record booksReview Date: 1999-10-30
This book is unparrelled in its information.Review Date: 1999-09-11
A Powerful TextReview Date: 2004-01-18
'Gerald Lawson's book is inspiration to our womens of the field and truck. I use this words when I'm coaching the girls and they love Mr Lawson and his prominent testimonials. Mr Lawson warns about steroids and I say to my girls that they should listen as steroids are bad, especially when they promote facial hair and aggressive gesturings. I know they have followed because the team's razor bill is now down to only $800 a week. Mr Lawson also teaches that smoking before an event is harming to the lunks and chesticals, so now they only light up after a run. My girls want to be just like Mr Lawson, without having to wait months for the operation in a pubic hospital.'
'World Record Breakers in Track & Field Athletics' is essential reading for all athletes and coaches.


Excellent GuidebookReview Date: 2001-07-05
Great Text For Writing Culture!Review Date: 2001-09-07
Not a To Do Book - More a Book on BeingReview Date: 2003-11-11
He takes on the hard topics. He talks plainly about the being reflexive and studying yourself as you go out to the site, watching for your own biases and preconditioned sensemaking. He discusses the hard aspect of leaving the site - when you have come to know the folks you've been watching and learning from. He discusses perhaps the hardest part of all - the writing of the ethnography, the development of one's own voice - the necessity of writing, rewriting, editing - and then writing again.
Bud's book is chockful of good concrete information, and yet when you are done reading, you realize the grandest part of all: He did it all with only a few bullet points, but with a great style of writing that makes you want to read it all over again.

Used price: $2.55

Sailing Off to DreamlandReview Date: 2002-10-13
Great PoemReview Date: 2008-07-03
A comfort bookReview Date: 2000-07-11

a wonderful book about turtles that should always be in printReview Date: 2006-06-15
david is a fabulous writer and illustrator......Review Date: 1998-12-20
Carroll's book is an incredibly beautiful natural history.Review Date: 1998-10-09

Used price: $0.71

A story about the parallel journeys of self-discovery undertaken by a boy and a young eagleReview Date: 2006-02-11
fills your heart . . .Review Date: 2006-09-15
Best children's author since C.S. Lewis Review Date: 2005-11-13

Used price: $14.52

Not so much a "Getting away from" as a "Going back to"Review Date: 2005-10-03
That's not the case with Thomas Rain Crowe, who spent four years (1978-1982) living alone in a cabin in the Smoky Mountains of western North Carolina. Crowe went back to his home state after living in a variety of places, doing a variety of work, communing with a variety of people. When given the opportunity to be the cabin tenant, he made the most of it. He worked hard to be self-sufficient, growing his own food and tending to his home and his tools. Others might have been bored in such a setting, but not him. He was always busy: gardening, fishing, taking care of his beehives, making homebrew, digging his root cellar, taking notes on the experience. And he regained the use of one his most valuable resources, the Southern Mountain speech of his childhood. He was downright satisfied with the situation.
His mentors in this effort were several local men who offered advice from time to time: Zoro Guice appeared in Yoda-like fashion whenever Crowe needed to learn how to perform a certain task. Walt Johnson was the scamp of the neighborhood, but was also an accomplished dowser who could find water every time. From these and other natives Crowe learned how to live close to the land, to live in the time of the seasons. The reader senses that Crowe would be living there still, if civilization hadn't encroached upon the property and changed it forever. That's when he knew he had to leave.
Not just a doer, Crowe is also a viewer -- a writer, a poet, a spiritual man who feels a strong connection to the natural world. His poetry uses simple words and turns of phrase to evoke powerful images. On the other hand, his prose, the narrative of his story, is the work of a learned and literate man. Complex constructs entice the reader to keep on going, to chew on the concepts and experiences offered. It takes time to digest these lines, and it's time well spent. Having witnessed Thomas Rain Crowe read some of this book aloud in person, I have the benefit of having heard the hint of the Smokies in his voice, the love for the place evident in every well-spoken syllable. No matter; it comes through in the typewritten text as well.
So was Thomas Wolfe right or wrong? Can you or can't you go home again? The reader decides. In the meantime, "Zoro's Field" should be placed on a shelf with the works of the old and new naturalists (Thoreau, Burroughs, Leopold, Carson, Eiseley, Bass) to one side, and the "Foxfire" books to the other. A thought-provoking addition to the environmental canon.
living with nature in Appalachian regionReview Date: 2005-05-29
NativeReview Date: 2005-05-25
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