|
|
A "Wall Street Journal" contributor presents a foray into the secret world of New York's Central Park, a natural wilderness that turns out to be surprisingly rich in wildlife.
The literature of bird watching is full of memoirs set in out-of-the-way, rural locales, but few are set in the heart of big cities such as New York, where Wall Street Journal ornithology columnist Marie Winn hangs her hat. In this delightful account, Winn tells of birding in Central Park with an unlikely band of fellow enthusiasts (including Mary Tyler Moore and Woody Allen). Among her objects of study were a pair of increasingly uncommon wood thrushes who set up their nest in the park's Ramble, treating city dwellers to their "penetrating, flutelike, heart-stoppingly beautiful song: Ee-oh-lee, ee-oh-loo-ee-lee, ee-lay-loo," and a pair of red-tail hawks who courted, mated, and produced offspring, thus quickening the spirits of Manhattanites. Both urbanites and those inclined to country matters will enjoy Winn's gracefully written story of observation and discovery.
|
Add
Your Review!
Read more reviews from Amazon.com or Barnes&Noble.com
|
|
|
|
|
Other titles you may be interested:
|
|
|
» Add BookFinder4U to your browser's Favorites
» Add BookFinder4U to your online bookmarks:  |
Page loading time: 0.53125 sec. | URL: http://www.bookfinder4u.com/detail/0679758461.html
©2008 BookFinder4U.com
Compare 130 bookstores - All rights Reserved.
Disclaim: Part of content on this site is properties of their respective
owners and copyright holders. Bookfinder4u will not under any circumstances
be liable to you or any other person for any loss due to the use of these
content. Some of the content that we make available to you through this
website comes from amazon web services. All such content is provided to
you "as is." this content and your use of it are subject to
change and/or removal at any time.
Privacy
Commitment Conditions of Use
|