Synopsis
Can you name all of the birds visiting your backyard feeder, swimming on a local pond, or soaring through familiar skies? This easy-to-use guide is perfect for the casual observer or beginning bird enthusiast. Its innovative Master Plates help eliminate confusion between similar birds, and the landscapes depicting a bird's habitat speed identification. Highly acclaimed by critics, Eastern Birds is the perfect companion for nature walks and for pleasurable birdwatching.
* Covers all of North America east of the Rockies
* Focuses on common species
* Describes plumage, gender differences, breeding habits, songs, and calls
* Maps detail summer, winter, year-round, and migratory ranges
* Common and scientific names
Comprehensive * Up-to-date * Authoritative
Written by world-renowned scholars, Golden Field Guides from St. Martin's Press are the leading nature guides for the home, field, and classroom. Designed for portability and easy access, these compact, lightweight books help Americans of every age explore a world of natural wonders.
Golden Guides from St. Martin's Press-- a trusted source for generations
About the Author
James Coe, an artist, author, and naturalist with a degree in biology from Harvard, grew up in the suburbs of New York City. As a child he was fascinated by the egrets and herons he spotted in nearby tidal marshes, and he quickly learned to identify most of the birds he found around town. Jim began to paint when, with a friend, he set out to compile a field guide to the local bird life-- a goal that has finally been realized with the publication of this book.
Jim obtained a Master's degree in painting at the Parson's School of Design, in New York City, in 1984. Over the years, he has contributed illustrations to numerous other books, including the Macmillan field guide Birds of North America: Western Region, and Birds of New Guinea, and to Frank Gill's widely used college textbook, Ornithology. His paintings have been published on the covers of Bird Watcher's Digest, and twice he has been commissioned to illustrate bird species new to science for Auk, the professional journal of the American Ornithologists' Union. Jim's artwork has been exhibited at the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, in Wausau, Wisconsin, the Bennington Center for the Arts, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, and at the New York State Museum.
Jim lives with his wife and two children on the western rim of New York's Hudson Valley. It is an ideal setting for a wildlife artist. From his studio, perched on the second story of a recent addition to their 150-year-old farmhouse, Jim can look out on acres of woodlands, a wildflower meadow, and a small pond. He has spotted 141 species of birds on the property.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.