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Title: 100 Birds and How They Got Their Names by Diana Wells, Lauren Jarrett ISBN: 1-56512-281-X Publisher: Algonquin Books Pub. Date: 16 November, 2001 Format: Hardcover Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $18.95 |
Average Customer Rating: 4 (3 reviews)
Rating: 4
Summary: An interesting and informative history of bird names.
Comment: There is a wealth of knowledge in this small volume. However, one must be aware of just what this book represents. It is by no means a field guide. If your interests are identifying birds in the field, this book will be of no assistance to you. If however you are the sort of person entertained by word meanings and word origins and are interested in mythological, historical, and Biblical anecdotes this is the perfect book for you as it will offer up several amusing bits of bird trivia. I use the book as an icebreaker in my biology classroom. My students enjoy listening to interesting trivia about birds and are often intrigued by how certain birds actually got their names. Sometimes the taxonomical treatment of birds is cumbersome but overall this is a very readable and entertaining book easily understood by the lay person.
Rating: 4
Summary: A look into the history of birds and words
Comment: Sometimes author Diana Wells gets a little too caught up in the etymology of various birds' Latin names, and then this book reads more like a dry encyclopedia than an affectionate survey of the relationship between some of the sweetest creatures on Earth and human language.
Usually, though, Ms. Wells succeeds in vividly tracing the evolution of the layperson's avian terminology. What does the word "titmouse" really mean? She'll tell you. And she takes the reader back into the farthest reaches of history and the roles that some of the most common birds have played in ancient society and even in biblical stories. For example, she explains with facility how nobility used falcons to hunt before guns were invented. She tells of how the starving Israelites, wandering in the wilderness after being freed from Egyptian slavery by Moses, came upon multitudes of quail. Thus, they feasted excessively on the birds until they became sick. The biblical interpretation of this mass indigestion was that the Israelites were punished for being so greedy, but Ms. Wells posits an intriguing secular explanation for what happened. You'll have to read the book to find out what that explanation is.
The author also helps the reader to view with tolerance what may be deemed some birds' shocking habits. The shrike impales small animals on walls and fences to eat later... not all that dissimilarly from what one might see in a butcher shop.
Rating: 4
Summary: fun with bird words
Comment: Delightfully literate look at both the origin of bird names (etymology) as well as the common usage of the names. Wells first looks at Greek, Latin, or Egyptian sources for the names. For example, I did not know that Egyptian mummified Ibis, the source of the ibis name. She also calls up stories of early biologists as Linnaeus, Mark Catsby, and Audubon to look at some of the early naming. She relays Audubon's account of wood storks scratching his legs. She also includes both obvious literary references such as Coleridge's albatross in the Rime of the Ancient Mariner and more obscure ones as Hamlet not being able to tell a "hawk from a handsaw" (heron).
In a few cases her ornithological information is not precise, for example in discussing "American" prairie chicken she says they "exist further south" (than the Northeast), but further west would be a more accurate description. The illustrations are sometimes not completely accurate, as the depiction of the thick upturned bill of the avocet.
For anyone who has wondered at such names as "goatsucker" this is a good readable, source.
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Title: 100 Flowers and How They Got Their Names by Diana Wells, Ippy Patterson ISBN: 1565121384 Publisher: Algonquin Books Pub. Date: February, 1997 List Price(USD): $17.95 |
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Title: 100 Vegetables and Where They Came From by William Woys Weaver, Signe Sundberg-Hall ISBN: 1565122380 Publisher: Algonquin Books Pub. Date: 20 October, 2000 List Price(USD): $18.95 |
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Title: Private Lives of Garden Birds by Calvin Simonds, Julie Zickefoose, Scott Shalaway ISBN: 1580174701 Publisher: Storey Books Pub. Date: September, 2002 List Price(USD): $18.95 |
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Title: Big Book of American Trivia by Stephen J. Lang ISBN: 0842383131 Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers Pub. Date: November, 2002 List Price(USD): $12.99 |
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Title: How Things Are Made: From Automobiles to Zippers by Sharon Rose, Neil Schlager ISBN: 1579122744 Publisher: Black Dog & Leventhal Pub Pub. Date: March, 2003 List Price(USD): $19.95 |
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