Cover Image: A Field Guide to Songbirds of North America

A Field Guide to Songbirds of North America

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Member Reviews

I received an arc of this title from NetGalley for an honest review. This might become one of my favorite books to recommend to new birders. Love the pictures, details, and sounds the birds make. Excellent book.

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This is a book that will be a treasure trove for the new birder but may disappoint the experienced. It is packed with information about bird songs and I learned quite a lot. There are beautiful illustrations of many birds with detailed information about their songs and more. That said, the illustrations are only of the adult males and it is not complete of every bird you'll encounter. It's more than enough for our family, especially as we have plenty of bird ID books that go into more depth about various species and show more birds. It's enormous and packed with information.

I read a temporary digital ARC of this book for review.

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A Field Guide to Songbirds of North America: A Visual Directory of 100 of the Most Popular Songbirds by Noble S. Proctor was a beautifully illustrated and very informative guide to songbirds filled with information about songbirds that I had never thought much about. The way the book provided information related to differences in songs and calls, reasons for both, and the physiology was interesting. #AFieldGuidetoSongbirdsofNorthAmerica #NetGalley

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A great book for bird lovers. I throughly enjoyed it as I read and learned about different birds. My thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for my advance ebook.

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A Field Guide to Songbirds of North America is an illustrated guide to 100 of the most common songbirds in North America curated and presented by Dr. Noble Proctor. Originally published in 2016, this reformat and re-release from Quarto on their Chartwell imprint is 256 pages and is available in flexibound (field) format.

This is a good basic guide to identifying and observing wild songbirds. There is an abbreviated chapter on natural foods and building a habitat in the home garden to more easily attract some species, but it's not the focus of the book. I liked that the author emphasized the social aspects of birding and encouraged new hobbyists to seek out like minded birders in their areas to learn the calls and habits of different species and build up confidence with identification and observation.

The directory is arranged in chapters by bird family: flycatchers, swallows, jays & crows, creepers, wrens, thrushes, and many others. There is a thumbnail gallery giving a small overall picture of each bird with page numbers for more comprehensive info. The entries include taxonomy (Latin names), common North American names, distribution & range maps, song info including sonograms (graphic representations in a sort of shorthand), brief notes with some behavior highlights, and a more complete description. The full page color illustrations show both sexes in natural poses. Though the book does include some photos, they are confined to the early chapters and not in the primer sections. The author has included a number of tips for attracting each species closer to the home gardens for observation.

This would make a good selection for public or school library acquisition, birding and/or gardening groups, scouting and cooperative extension agencies, and similar. This would also be a good choice for the beginning or intermediate birder and is suitable for all ages.

Four stars.

Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.

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Good introductory book to songbirds of North America (the United States and Canada). Has some useful information on some of the songbirds but is missing a number of species you can commonly find in the US and Canada. Also some species like the meadowlark are listed as Eastern Meadowlark. However, there is a Western Meadowlark. This species should be listed as Meadowlarks (Eastern/Western) and the distribution should reflect where both species and which are they hybridize. Same for junco and bluebirds! There are some notable errors and omissions in the book. Listed is the Water Pipit as being found in the United States. However, this species is found in Southern Europe and the Paleartic and up to China. The American Pipit is found in the United States. Only recommend this book to people beginning to birdwatch.

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A succinct, good introduction to songbirds in North America! Depending on where you live, some of the entries may be more relevant than others, but that doesn't make this book any less interesting. Proctor takes 100 of the most popular songbirds in the nation, and makes a two-page vignette for every one. Each bird has a page with its name, scientific name, and picture of the bird (sometimes with male and female if the two are distinct enough), and then a description of the bird, its call, where it lives and how it acts, and how you could attract that bird (foods it likes, land that it likes to be in.) It's super informative without dragging or being boring. This is a great resource for anyone looking to learn more about common birds and their calls, especially if you are becoming a backyard birder or would like to know more about the birds you are seeing on your walks!

Thanks to Netgalley and Chartwell Books for the e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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This is the perfect book for the bird lover. You can learn everything you need to know to attract and keep birds in your backyard. You will learn the birds that are common in your area. The book goes into a great details about the different songs the birds sing. There's a lovely chart of what what the different birds like to eat. How and where they like to live. The individual pictures of the birds with the map of where they live, their song, when they like to sing, and their behavior is so helpful in learning about your favorite birds. This makes me want to get out and start locating some of these pretty birds.

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I was very excited to get approved to read this book. I volunteer at a bird ringing station and also majored in ecology in Europe. In a non-pandemic situation I travel to the USA every couple of years and own a couple of field guides already. I wanted to see that compared to said guides, how useful this new addition in my collection might be.

I am sad to say I was very disappointed. I think the biggest problem with this book is the marketing.

This is not a field guide but rather a very basic introduction to some of the songbirds of North America. As a field guide at the least it should have proper images of male, female and even juvenile birds to be able to identify them. In this book each bird is introduced with a (beautiful I have to say) art piece, but without identifying the pictured bird's maturity or gender.
I am unsure if there will be an audiobook version of this, but if not, the birdsong section was plain useless. The descriptions in the 'in brief" part (food, nest, habitat etc.) are way to superficial, not to mention the actual half a page description that basically repeats a big portion of the in brief section and/or helps in no way identifying or describing a specific species. The description is also vague and most of it could be copy pasted to sections of numerous other species.

I have to say that by far the Introduction chapter was the most useful part of this book, but as something advertised as a field guide it was also too brief.

I would highly suggest renaming and rebranding this book for it to target a more appropriate audience and reflect it's true content and usefulness.
The art in the book is beautiful though there is a strong discrepancy between the art in the Inrtoduction and the art in the Directory.

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Songbirds bring so much interest and joy to back yards and parks! I love that this book details information in addition to identification such as the differences between songs and calls, reasons for each, varieties of calls (alarms, attracting/impressing a mate) and the physiology behind songs and calls. Some birds sing in the morning, others in the evening. Though I live part time in a -40C winter climate our birds are restricted but amazingly we still have several species. I also live part time on a different continent, warm climate, and am always amazed at the variety of both.

The feeding and nesting requirement charts are useful as is the explanation of nests and nesting boxes. I wish there were photographs in addition to illustrations, though the illustrations are very clear and precise. For each bird the author includes its location zone, song, habitat, food, nesting material and attracting them plus other categories.

After reading this book I want to drill holes into stumps and place food inside. We do not have grey jays here. but will still use the pine cone idea for other birds I also was not aware that songbird species will bury unwanted eggs. Sometimes the best ideas are simplest, such as the jar or bottle feeder. Those interested in birds or who want to learn more about them, do read this book.

My sincere thank you to Quarto Publishing Group - Chartwell Books and NetGalley for the privilege of reading this fabulous and practical book!

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I can’t say this was great, the images were not my favourite style for identification and there just was not enough of them, adult males only. I have a 20 year old bird identification book that is more relevant.

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Incredibly informative! I've always been curious about the birds that frequently visit my garden and the various chirping I hear when I wake up. This is an excellent resource that is comprehensive without being dry, informative, intriguing, and comes with loads of pictures and diagrams. There's plenty of tips for how to attract certain types of birds, how to identify a species based on their song (there's even a graphic and description breaking down the cadence of each bird's song), etc.

It's perfect for casual readers and hobbyists, and would make a great coffee table book or display piece!

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During Covid I often went for walks at my local botanical garden. While there, I saw and heard a number of birds. I recognized a few-robins, cardinals, sparrows, red tailed hawks and several more but I always wished that I knew more. In terms of sounds, I recognized a woodpecker and that was about it.

This book was created for folks like me although even those with more knowledge can also enjoy this title. There is a helpful introduction about why, how, when and where songbirds may be found. The book goes on to include lots of songbirds in categories, as for example, larks swallows, jays, nuthatches, wood warblers, tangers and many more. Readers enjoyment of the text is enhanced by the many detailed illustrations.

This book also has information on topics including making feeders and homes for birds. Some of these projects will undoubtedly lead to even more enjoyment as birds could land right in a reader’s backyard.

This title is an excellent resource for learning about birds. There is plenty of information on each bird that is featured within these pages. For example, take the Olive-sided Flycatcher. I now know where they can be found, what their song is like, how they behave, what they eat and more. There is similar information for each of the included birds.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher. All opinions are my own. I can’t wait to get back in nature to learn more.

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