Books
- Wild Animal Ways
- Manual of Pack Transportation
- The Verb to 'bird': Sightings of an Avid Birder
- Khyber Knights: An Account of Perilous Adventure and Forbidden Romance in the Depths of Mystic Asia
- Tschiffely's Ride: Southern Cross to Pole Star
- The Tale of Two Horses: A 10, 000 Mile Journey as Told by the Horses
- This Way Southward: The Account of a Journey Through Patagonia and Tierra Del Fuego
- Bohemia Junction
- Following the Frontier: Horseback Adventures on the Infamous Outlaw Trail
- On Horseback in Virginia: Riding Through the Old South
- California Coast Trails: A Horseback Ride from Mexico to Oregon
- My Kingdom for a Horse: The Story of a Journey on Horseback from the Cornish Moors to the Scottish Border
- The Journeys of Celia Fiennes
- On Horseback Through Asia Minor
- The Abode of Snow: A Journey from Tibet to the Khyber Pass on Horseback
- A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains
- Travels in Afghanistan: The Adventures of a 1930s Mounted Explorer
- Through Mexico on Horseback
- Horses, Saddles & Bridles
- Notes on Elementary Equitation
- Horse Packing: A Manual of Pack Transportation
- Mongolian Adventure: 1920s Danger and Escape Among the Mounted Nomads of Central Asia
- Shanghai a Moscou: Un Voyage a Cheval De 17, 500 Kilometres
- Road to the Grey Pamir: A Political Renegade's Equestrian Journey Through Central Asia
- Boots & Saddles in Africa: Equestrian Travels in Ancient Abyssinia
Average customer rating:
- step by step nonverbal instruction
- Great Drawing Book
- Artists who love cats will love this book.
- Great drawing book
- From a cat-lover
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Draw 50 Cats: The Step-by-Step Way to Draw Domsetic Breeds, Wild Cats, Cuddly Kittens, and Famous Felines
Lee J. Ames
Manufacturer: Broadway
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Similar Items:
- Draw 50 Dogs (Draw 50)
- Draw 50 Horses (Draw 50)
- Draw 50 Flowers, Trees and Other Plants: The Step-By-Step
- Draw 50 Baby Animals: The Step-By-Step Way to Draw Kittens, Lambs, Chicks, and Other Adorable Offspring
- Draw 50 Birds: The Step-by-Step Way to Draw Chickadees, Peacocks, Toucans, Mallards, and Many More of Our Feathered Friends (Draw 50 Series , No 25)
ASIN: 0385246404
Release Date: 1989-04-01 |
Book Description
This book brings to life Siamese, Persians, lions, tigers, panthers and such celebrity felines as Felix, Top Cat and Snaggle Puss.
Customer Reviews:
step by step nonverbal instruction.......2005-01-06
I wanted to draw more realistic cats
and this book showed me that I needed to start with the head shape
and not the ears. There was not a lot of writing, just good step-by-step instruction. From my first drawing with this book, my drawings have improved. I highly reccomend this book!
Great Drawing Book.......2004-12-21
This is the best drawing book I have gotten to date. It gives detailed instruction. Almost immediatley I was able to draw realistic looking cats. Using the techniques in the book I was able to expand and draw other animals as well.
Artists who love cats will love this book........2003-10-20
I am teaching my students to draw cats using this book. I like the step-by-step drawings and the different position and types of cats.
We have gone one step further in class by making our own stationery and cards using our finished drawings. We add a complimentary quote to our drawing from the book 516 Sensational Cat Quotes, Proverbs, Quips and Jokes for Scrapbooking, Crafting and Fun ISBN 0966640578
Teachers, have your student make a copy of the original so that they can make numerous copies. Save the originals.
Great drawing book. I highly recommend it.
We are having fun in class.
Great drawing book.......2000-12-27
My daughter borrowed some of these books from the school library & loved them so much i bought some for her. It goes step by step with you,giving examples,to show you how to make wonderful drawings.Great book for anyone who likes to draw.
From a cat-lover.......2000-06-20
This book is just what I needed! It has fairly simple stepswhich create great results in only a few minutes. I borrowed thisbook from a friend and I was drawing grrreat tigers before I had to give it back. Now all I have to do is buy it! :)
Average customer rating:
- Interesting story - biological and anthropological
- Amazing scientist, unexceptional writer.
- Breathtaking, humorous and poignant
- Exciting and sometimes hilarous natural history book
- Heights of discovery
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Throwim' Way Leg: Tree-Kangaroos, Possums, and Penis Gourds
Tim Flannery
Manufacturer: Grove Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Similar Items:
- Papua New Guinea & Solomon Islands (Lonely Planet)
- Papua New Guinea Map by ITMB (Travel Reference Map)
- The Future Eaters: An Ecological History of the Australasian Lands and People
- Four Corners: A Journey into the Heart of Papua New Guinea
- Where the Spirits Dwell: An Odyssey in the Jungle of New Guinea
ASIN: 0802136656 |
Amazon.com
In Throwim Way Leg, Australia-based mammologist-raconteur Tim Flannery recalls scientific expeditions in the wilds of New Guinea that convey both the thrill of discovery and the negotiations necessary to bridge huge clashes of cultures. A world expert on New Guinea's fauna, Flannery has discovered 20 new species during his two decades of research. Yet his ability to convey unalloyed adventure in his taletelling makes these scientific expeditions read more like hair-raising, funky Redmond O'Hanlon-style travels than disciplined, scholarly field trips. Energy and danger run high.
Terrific thunderstorms and aircraft mishaps rattle Flannery during his travels. Yet the most memorable quality of Throwim Way Leg is Flannery's incorporation of humans into the natural world he writes about, often contrasting the jungled New Guinea denizens with stark modern technologies. He writes rich profiles of those he has met, and his images are memorable and meaningful: crowds of people gaping at a single television set; the remote landscape of Mt. Albert Edward dotted with cattle, Swiss chalets, and the smoky fires of the Goilala people; the malnourished Yapsiei greeting him reeking of the "sweet, sickly smell" of grile, a form of ringworm.
Ultimately, Flannery looks ahead and sees that the age of discovery is not at all complete in New Guinea, as so much remains unknown. But, in an often-told tale, modern political forces are at work, reshaping those unique natural and cultural environments that Throwim Way Leg explores with such vigor. --Byron Ricks
Customer Reviews:
Interesting story - biological and anthropological.......2006-08-20
Flannery is the Principal Research Scientist at the Australian Museum. This book recounts several of his expeditions in Papua New Guinea and Irian Jaya in the 80s and 90s.
He's the opposite to Douglas Adams. In approaching some similar topics in his `Last Chance to See' Adams was primarily a writer. Flannery is primarily a biologist - the writing came second. Thus there's not the wit, and the style is often understated. In some cases this is quite charming as he pretty casually relates some harrowing incidents (such as getting stuck alone in an underground crevice). In contrast his vocabulary can get a bit ostentatious: he'll use always use a word like `ossuary', for example, rather than graveyard, and in one case he used a word I've forgotten now that from the context must mean something like overeating, but didn't even appear in my complete Macquarie dictionary. (Ah, another amazon reviewer had the same problem, although they were impressed by the obscure vocabulary, while I was unimpressed by same: 'farcarted' gets nothing from any online dictionaries - the only place it turns up in a google search is in these perplexed amazon reviews. Maybe it's an in-joke.)
These are exotic places and creatures, and Flannery capably recalls some real adventures. Part of the strange appeal of this book is shaking your head at some of the near-insane deprivations and risks his biological obsession has entailed (hence the insightful description of another reviewer, `bloody mad scientist'). Moreover half the fascination is anthropological. He generally does very well walking the line between eulogising and demonising the tribal Papuans. He ably conveys some of the dilemmas of contact between ancient and modern, such as the time when in all good faith he acceded to requests to sharpen all the knives in a village, but then was appalled to see several villagers accidentally cutting themselves deeply because they'd never had anything but blunt edges. He does tend towards the assumption that any loss of traditional culture is automatically bad, but honestly allows us to see some ugly things that challenge this assumption.
Towards the end of the book, as much to his chagrin as ours, we're not able to merely enjoy the excitement of discovery of species because of the context of ugly mistreatment of Irian nationals by their Indonesian conquerors. I got the feel that none of us wanted this to be a `political' book, particularly not a partisan one, but in telling his story it becomes unavoidable. Flannery again to his credit is very careful not to say `all Indonesians', or `all the mining company workers', but sadly his biological expeditions are somewhat overrun just at the end by encounters with some brutal racism, at times incidental, at others structural.
Amazing scientist, unexceptional writer........2006-05-16
Without a doubt Tim Flannery ranks with the world's greatest scientist/explorers. He has a wealth of fascinating and valuable tales to tell from his travels to New Guinea. However, the book has little coherent structure. It's just a series of (mostly) unrelated stories, like he might recount over dinner. The details of his trips are incredible, but by the time I was half way through, I began losing my interest and felt I was re-reading previous passages.
Breathtaking, humorous and poignant.......2004-09-09
Flannery is one of a kind. He is to New Guinea what Perry and Amundson are to the poles, a first-comer .... one of the first to explore and document the stone age peoples of the mysterious island wilderness in the last days of its age of innocence.
Yes, there are cannibals, with bones in their noses and gourds worn on their penis, yet Flannery somehow manages to get the reader to empathize with these people, to understand their foibles and traditions, and to feel regret that their ancient ways are going, going, gone ... forever. Take the chapter where he goes in pursuit of the Bulmer's Fruit Fly Bat -- you suffer with him the agonies of failure and the desperations of the search, and the exhilaration of success. Or follow along with his learning experiences among the native tribes and come to actually understand the hows and whys of the way the led their lives, even to discovering there were (to the natives) valid reasons for their rare acts of cannibalism.
Although he describes some of the most spectacular natural wonders of the world, the reader comes to know that Papua New Guinea will never rate very highly as a tourist destination, but you'll have to read this book to appreciate the reasons why.
Think you couldn't possibly be interested in such things? Try twenty pages of this charming book; the images will lived in your memory forever.
Hooroo, Tim! Bonzer yarn, mate!
Exciting and sometimes hilarous natural history book.......2003-05-26
I thoroughly enjoyed this wonderful book! In it, mammalogist Tim Flannery regales us with tales from his many years in New Guinea, searching for new species of mammals on the island, the second largest in the world. A difficult island to work in - highly mountainous; extremely few roads, most villages so isolated that they can only be reached by small planes flying to landing strips hacked out of the jungle; parts of it some of the rainiest spots on earth, some areas receiving 11 meters or more of rain a year; possessing many dangerous animals ranging from crocodiles to snakes to huge spiders; tropical diseases and parasites a real problem in many areas (including malaria and scrub typhus, from which Flannery almost died from when bit by an infected tick) ý Flannery had his work cut out for them as he spent over two decades on the island, both in the eastern half, the independent nation of Papua New Guinea, and the western section, Irian Jaya, part of Indonesia.
Flannery is a highly accomplished scientist, having discovered 16 new species of mammals in Melanesia, many of them in New Guinea. Many of these and others are described in the book, and make for fascinating reading. We meet the Black-tailed Giant-rat, the bite from its two centimeter long razor sharp incisors much feared by the inhabitants of the island. The Three-striped Dasyure, a vividly marked rat-sized marsupial predator, one of New Guinea's few mammals active during daylight hours. The Snow Mountains Robin, one of the rarest birds in the world, found in the high alpine regions of the Meren Glacier in Irian Jaya, one of the very few equatorial glaciers in the world. _Antechinus, a small carnivorous marsupial notable in that the male only lives for 11 months, existing only to breed. The diminutive, dingo-like New Guinea singing dog, which arrived in the islands some 2,000 years ago. The six o'clock cicada, a tremendously loud insect that received its name from its trill it emits roughly 6am and 6pm daily. The famous Birds of Paradise, breathtaking in their beauty, several species of which are extremely rare. He also describes the Long-fingered Triok, a black and white skunk smelling possum with the fourth finger of each hand a great elongated probe for finding insect larvae; you never know what he is going to find next lurking in the barely explored misty peaks and dripping jungles of the island.
Three of the most remarkable animals are ones that Flannery discovered or in one case rediscovered. One is _Maokopia ronaldi_, an extinct marsupial herbivore that once dwelt in the high mountain forests. Panda-like in appearance, size, and probably habits, Flannery named this new genus and species from fossils he found in Irian Jaya. Bulmer's Fruit-bat, a bat though extinct for 12,000 years, the largest cave dwelling bat in the world, Flannery was elated to have found them alive in extremely rugged western Papua New Guinea. The one though that Flannery is the most proud of discovering was the Dingiso, a new species of tree-kangaroo he found in the alpine areas of Irian Jaya, a beautiful black and white animal, surprising tame, threatened but fortunately partially protected by native taboos against harming them.
However, as remarkable as all of that is, one could argue that the real stars of this book are the people of New Guinea, particularly the indigenous Melanesian peoples that Flannery spends a great deal of time with and clearly loves. Much of his time researching in the field he was based out of the villages of such people as the Wopkaimin, the Telefol, and the Goilala where he became fast friends with many throughout the island, in both countries, viewing them not as savage barbarians, but as noble, often quite kind people, their older generation vast repositories of cultural and natural history lore. One of the most enjoyable aspects of the books were the many stories about life in those villages, some of the tales tragic, others heartwarming, and many hilarious.
Particularly fascinating was what he wrote about the history of cannibalism on the island. Apparently it did exist in the not too distant past, actually in the living memory of some of the villagers he encountered. Though not an every day occurrence by any means, cannibalism was an important part of New Guinea life; indeed, one group Flannery spent some time with, the Miyanmin, were once avid raiders, and actually referred to the neighboring Atbalmin people as ýbokis es bilong miplea,ý which more or less translates into something like ýour refrigerator.ý Though cannibalism is now a thing of the past, its effects are still felt he writes, as villages once got some of their population from raids of other villages, the adults of that village were consumed and the children raised as their own; now, that is no longer a source of new people for villages and some are facing some depopulation as a result.
Flannery sounds several cautionary notes in his book. Several species of New Guinea mammals and birds are in serious danger of extinction from over hunting. Though New Guinea is still a land largely without roads, more and more appear all the time, opening up virgin lands for hunters, loggers, and miners. Indeed in Irian Jaya the latter two are devastating ever larger sections of the island; the massive Freeport mine, which exports over ten million dollars worth of minerals daily, has destroyed large sections of forest with waste mine tailings.
He also worries about the future of the people, particularly in Irian Jaya. He believes that in an attempt to make that land more like the rest of Indonesia it is causing not only environmental damage but also cultural damage. Indeed there are concerns over human rights abuses in Irian Jaya, of dissidents disappearing, of remote villagers forced to wear modern clothing and abandon their pig eating culture by distant Muslim politicians, who often find native culture abhorrent.
Recommended.
Heights of discovery.......2002-06-12
If Tim Flannery isn't the luckiest biologist in the world, then perhaps he's the hardest working. He possesses a spirit of adventure that may exceed both. His twenty years of exploring the mysteries of New Guinea are superbly outlined and related in this engaging account. Although a mammalogist by profession, his interests range far beyond any academic discipline. We follow his efforts to meet and gain acceptance by the remote peoples of the New Guinea highlands. They are a diverse lot, and every new contact is fraught with uncertainty. He introduces us to the teasing pleasures of New Guinea pidgin, a language adopted by indigineous peoples to cross the nearly 1 000 languages that exist on the island.
Throwim' Away Leg, New Guinean pidgin for a journey, is an appropriate title for this book. Flannery's 15 long-term expeditions took him over most of the island, meeting the people, tracking animals and assessing the changes in the ecology. It is difficult, in this jet travel age to comprehend the impact of "remote people," but Flannery has done it. He's adept at sharing the wonder he felt in his travels. We feel his fears, his joys of discovery, his sadness at the incursion of industrial civilization in an unprepared land. Flannery's account is given with an astonishing detachment. He recognizes the needs of both the indigenous people and the invaders. Cannibalism, so abhorrent to "civilized" readers, is placed in its true framework as viewed by the New Guinean mountain peoples. He's aware of the population pressures on local resources among the tribes, not excusing, but imparting rare understanding of the reality of life in wilderness.
The author's love of wildlife is made clear throughout the book. An encounter with three-metre-long python that tried desperately to throttle him is related with incredible compassion. One can only sympathize with the pilot and passengers who shared the cockpit of a small aircraft with it on its journey to Port Moresby. Flannery's real feelings, however, are for the varieties of tree kangaroos living on the island. He asserts the high point of his travels was the classification of a rare black and white species of this creature. High point, indeed! Three
thousand metres up in the New Guinean highlands, local hunters brought him the chewed remains of two "Dingisios" - enough to identify and describe this rare animal.
Flannery's enthusiasms and vivid desriptive powers make this book an unforgettable read. His descriptions of the impact of outsiders, from both East and West, portray a land under immense stress. Not only Western mining and lumber companies, who have seared the landscape with roads, mines and felling, but Indonesia's settlement programmes come under his penetrating gaze. He recognizes their needs, but urges better forms of accomodation are required. The biological story is conveyed well integrated with social, political and environmental issues. An all-encompassing study, this book will give the reader many fresh insights and topics for further reflection.
Average customer rating:
- A Sweet Little Adventure
- Teach your child to read and learn about africa with this book..
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Way Far Away on a Wild Safari
Jan Peck
Manufacturer: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Africa
| Fiction
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Similar Items:
- Way Up High in a Tall Green Tree
- Way Down Deep in the Deep Blue Sea
- Starry Safari
- Safari Animals (Animal Verse)
- The Giant Carrot
ASIN: 1416900721 |
Book Description
Grab your binoculars
and follow me.
Let's travel far away
on a wild safari.
There are lots of fun trails!
Many sights to see!
As we hike, hike, hike,
on this wild safari.
Customer Reviews:
A Sweet Little Adventure.......2007-01-19
Way Far Away on a Wild Safari is a cute read aloud story that would world well as a transition book for young children just starting out reading. The text is simple; the pictures are colorful and engaging, and just plain fun. Picture one adventurer, complete with pith helmet, one plate of animal crackers and a vivid imagination and you've got yourself a wild safari in the making! The text is just repetitive enough for younger children to be able to catch on and join in as the story goes on and when it's retold to them...because they WILL want it read to them again and again!
The age range listed on the inside flap is 3-6 but I believe that this is one of those books you can start early and read right up until about preschool age (so a range of 0-5) and that it's one that your 4-5 year old will come back to as he or she is learning to read, because it's familiar and fun. Additionally this book is a nice way to introduce African animals to your youngster, each is brightly pictured and even the lion is not scary, so great for young children in every way possible! I give it five stars, your kids will come back to this story time and again.
Teach your child to read and learn about africa with this book.........2006-09-30
Way Far Away on a Wild Safari is the third excellent book in Jan Peck's "Way" series. There is a reason these books were plugged on the PBS website. Jan's wonderful verse, and Valeria Petrone's masterful illustrations introduce little ones to reading, African animals, and rhyme. Do your child a favor and buy he/she all three of the titles.
Average customer rating:
- Makes the world a better place, smiling all the while
- Useful, Easy to Read, Great Gift, Makes a Difference
- Laura really knows her stuff!
- If everyone read this book....
- Wonderful 101 ways
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101 Ways to Help Birds
Laura Erickson
Manufacturer: Stackpole Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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Similar Items:
- For the Birds: An Uncommon Guide (Appointment With Nature)
- The Art of Pishing: How to Attract Birds by Mimicking Their Calls (Book & Audio CD)
- Pete Dunne's Essential Field Guide Companion: A Comprehensive Resource for Identifying North American Birds
- Songbird Journeys: Four Seasons In the Lives of Migratory Birds
- The All-Season Backyard Birdwatcher: Feeding and Landscaping Techniques Guaranteed to Attract the Birds You Want Year Round (Quarry Book)
ASIN: 0811733025 |
Book Description
This engaging book presents 101 things individuals can do to help both individual birds and bird populations as a whole. It also explains exactly how these actions can make a difference--what wrongs they help correct and what improvements they can bring about. Bird-friendly (and environment-friendly) practices are described in detail: things anyone can do around the home and garden, at work, at the store, in their community, in the outdoors, and on the road. Anyone who appreciates wild birds knows that the animals need our help. This timely guide shows bird-lovers what they can do.
Customer Reviews:
Makes the world a better place, smiling all the while.......2006-11-12
I wish I had written this book. I'm a professional bird conservationist, and this book really provides the best introduction to the many ways that our lifestyles impact birds and the environment. Its a beautiful little book, with great ideas, fresh writing, and a cheerful tone. Laura manages to suggest 101 ways to improve your lifestyle, without loading on the guilt. A bible for bird lovers. Very informative, inspiring, and motivating. If you are one of the 50 million Americans who watch birds in your yard, or you just want some practical ideas on how to make your lifestyle more sustainable, do yourself a favor--buy the book, find something new to try, then buy copies of it as a present for those you love.
Useful, Easy to Read, Great Gift, Makes a Difference.......2006-08-16
I bought this as a gift for my wife, who just qualified our backyard as a National Wildlife Habitat. It is sensibly organized in five parts:
Part I: Helping Birds at Home
Part II: Enhancing the Natural Habitat of Your Backyard
Part III: Supplementing Backyard Habitat
Part IV: Helping Birds Away from Home
Part V: Helping Birds on a Larger Scale
As experienced bird lovers and supporters, I can readily say that there is a great deal in this book that I was unaware of. Parts III and IV were most interesting to me, and Part V I had never really thought about. If birds are the "canary in the coal mine" for the Earth, then this book, as other reviewers have suggested, of larger importance, but for me, it is quite simply a wonderful selection of 101 useful easy to read ideas that can make a difference.
Very nice.
Laura really knows her stuff!.......2006-06-29
I love this little book, and find it incredibly useful.
If everyone read this book...........2006-06-05
If everyone read this book and put into practice just a few of these suggestions, this world would be a much better place.
Although written from the perspective of helping birds, many of these suggestions will help the world as a whole, one step at a time. As I read this book, I was surprised to learn the consequences of some of my actions that I had never even thought about. Now I'm thinking seriously about changing some of these seemingly innocuous behaviors since I know their big-picture impacts.
While not purporting to have all the answers, Erickson has done an incredible amount of research and helps guide us to make responsible decisions on even the stickiest of issues.
Anything but a dry read, and a book you won't soon forget.
Wonderful 101 ways.......2006-05-08
This book is so useful because it gives all kinds of tips, from saving an injured bird to trying to solve the issue of birds flying into windows. They are tips on food loved by diffent species, ideas for youth helping birds, or advice for controlling rodents.
There are addresses and internet links to birds associations, organizations, environment agencies. Did you know that orioles love orange marmelade ? Do you know when is best to clean your chimney and that it is dangerous to provide heated bird baths in winter ? Exquisite illustrations appear throughout the book.
And then there are small personal stories that will touch your heart.
If you are only mildly interested in birds, this book will make an avid and loving birder out of you, and life will sizzle even more !
Average customer rating:
- A charming book...humourous, yet to the point
- A charming book...humourous, yet to the point
- A beautiful book for all who love nature
- A must have book for everyone, anyone.
|
King Solomon's Ring: New Light on Animal Ways (Routledge Classics)
Konrad Lorenz
Manufacturer: Routledge
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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- Man Meets Dog (Routledge Classics)
- On Aggression (Routledge Classics)
- King Solomon's Ring: New Light on Animals' Ways
- Patterns of Behavior: Konrad Lorenz, Niko Tinbergen, and the Founding of Ethology
- Behind The Mirror: A Search for a Natural History of Human Knowledge
ASIN: 0415267471 |
Book Description
A delightful treasury of observations and insights into the lives of all sorts of creatures -- from jackdaws and water-shrews to dogs, cats and even wolves -- this is a wonderfully written introduction to the world of our furred and feathered friends!
Customer Reviews:
A charming book...humourous, yet to the point.......2004-03-11
Konrad Lorenz, though I've never heard of him, captivated me from the first page. He relates himself to King Solomon, who talked to animals through the use of a magic ring. From there on, he goes to explain animals and their behaviour, how it has affected him, and the passion and joy they can bring into one's life.
His description of animal behaviour is also not solely for scientists. In fact, it is Lorenz's language that is the most astounding. He is able to convey all the complex ideas of animals behaviour into simple terms which all readers can understand.
This is a great book for everyone, filled with passion by a man who loved who and what he was.
A charming book...humourous, yet to the point.......2004-03-11
Konrad Lorenz, though I've never heard of him, captivated me from the first page. He relates himself to King Solomon, who talked to animals through the use of a magic ring. From there on, he goes to explain animals and their behaviour, how it has affected him, and the passion and joy they can bring into one's life.
His description of animal behaviour is also not solely for scientists. In fact, it is Lorenz's language that is the most astounding. He is able to convey all the complex ideas of animals behaviour into simple terms which all readers can understand.
This is a great book for everyone, willed with passion by a man who loved who and what he was.
A beautiful book for all who love nature.......2004-01-20
Confession - I'd never heard of Konrad Lorenz (even though he won the Nobel Prize in 1973), and I don't usually read books by Naturalists.
I was driving between business meetings during the day, when I happened to tune in to BBC Radio 4 (same as National Public Radio in the USA), and by accident caught a book reading of Chapter 10 regarding Dogs. Then on another day I caught Chapter 11 on Birds. Captivated, I actually pulled over so that I could hear the whole chapter & find out what the book was and who the Author was.
Then I ordered the book as a treat to myself for Christmas.
Fantastic! With some abridging 'on the fly', this book could even be read to/by a younger audience say down to 8 years old, who would enjoy, laugh & cry at some of the stories contained herein.
I wish my science teacher had read this to me when I was 8, rather than do some silly experiments with boring pond life (Chapter 2 would have taught me more about Pond Life)!
A must have book for everyone, anyone........2003-11-29
A rare 5 stars for this one, simply delightful, a joy to read. Lorenz is so full of love for his craft, yes I say craft because that is the way he treats his study of animal behaviour. Not an average scientist but rather somehow he has that rare ability to both love his work and be able to write about it to a lay audience with wonderful wit, charm, wisdom and grace. He's a little like Adolf Portmann except with more humour but the same love.
I mentioned that he writes this book for lay readers, not scientists, and unlike the contemporary crowd, who often write in a more condescending way he manages to get across the animals and their complex behaviour without ever at any stage making the reader think himself inadequate to the task. He writes as a human being experiencing the wonders of the natural world and does not artificially reduce it to ashes and leache the life out of it as others do. Here he actually makes people want to become naturalists or biologists. There is no finer writer in the sciences.
In the book, a little tome of 190 pages, he discusses a whole range of animals he studies notably, often from his own home where he keeps an entire managerie of ducks, geese, jackdaws, parrots, dogs, hamsters, water shrews etc etc. The whole house is alive with the raucous cries and crazy comings and goings of his companions. He gives much to the reader such as how to manage an aquarium properly, how to look after animals correctly so their lives are well lived and the book is chocka-block full of animal tales. The kind of tales myths and legends are grown from. I mean that the tales are often so remarkable, e.g. the intelligence shown by his pet raven or the story of two men carrying a canoe followed by several goslings, a large red dog and some ducklings. Its droll and humouress and full of joy. And, in it all the way through are his wondrous drawings portraying everything he tells of in the book.
A must have book for everyone, anyone.
Average customer rating:
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The Way of the Grizzly (Worldlife Discovery Guides)
Tom Walker
Manufacturer: Voyageur Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Bears
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- Bears of Alaska
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- Grizzly Seasons: Life with the Brown Bears of Kamchatka
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ASIN: 0896584038 |
Book Description
Voyageur Naturally is your one-stop resource for books about nature and country sports. We have one of the largest selections available for both adult and young adult and readers. Zoos and aquariums, natural history museums, gift shops, sporting book retailers, and other booksellers all appreciate the depth and quality of our series and our commitment to providing up-to-date information from leading naturalists and scientists.
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The Way of the Wolf (Wildlife)
David Mech
Manufacturer: Voyageur Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
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Mammals
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Similar Items:
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ASIN: 0896581799 |
Book Description
Written with a general audience in mind, The Way of the Wolf focuses on wolf behavior and biology, offering an overview of the animals' social hierarchy, communication methods, feeding habits, courtship, and reproduction. A new understanding of the world's most misunderstood and maligned animal. 75 full-color photographs.
Customer Reviews:
excellent.......1999-01-05
Mech is the alpha wolf of wolf biologist. If you have an interest in wolves, start with a serious wolf biologist who is an excellent writer.
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Wild Beasts And Their Ways
Samuel W. Baker
Manufacturer: Dodo Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 1406505013 |
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Few persons are aware of the extreme quickness with which an elephant can kick, and the great height that can be reached by this mischievous use of the hind foot. I have frequently seen an elephant kick as sharp as a small pony, and the effect of a blow from so ponderous a mass propelled with extreme velocity may be imagined. This is a peculiar action, as the elephant is devoid of hocks, and it uses the knees of the hind legs in a similar manner to those of a human being.
Download Description
Few persons are aware of the extreme quickness with which an elephant can kick, and the great height that can be reached by this mischievous use of the hind foot. I have frequently seen an elephant kick as sharp as a small pony, and the effect of a blow from so ponderous a mass propelled with extreme velocity may be imagined. This is a peculiar action, as the elephant is devoid of hocks, and it uses the knees of the hind legs in a similar manner to those of a human being.
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Wild Animal Ways, with 200 Drawings By the Author
Ernest Thompson Seton
Manufacturer: Doubleday, Page and Company
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000HY3LRI |
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Wild Animals of Forest and Jungle: A Natural History for the Young: Animals Great and Small, Strange and Curious, As Seen in the Zoological Garden or in ... in an Entertaining and Instructive Way
Frederick Lonnkvist
Manufacturer: The John C. Winston Co.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: B00088BJ3G |
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