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Presentation & Book Signing with David Sibley
September 12, 2009 - 3:00pm
Free Presentation/Book Signing with Nationally Recognized Field Guide Author David Sibley
Saturday, September 12th 2009 @ 3:00 pm
Location: The yard of the Mercer Museum.
David Sibley, renowned ornithologist and author of The Sibley Guide to Birds, will be in Doylestown this 2009 Arts Fest weekend to host a talk and sign copies of his newest book, The Sibley Guide to Trees. Meet him and get your questions answered!
Attendence at the event is free.
The son of ornithologist Fred Sibley, David Sibley began birding in childhood. A largely self-taught bird illustrator, he was inspired to pursue creating his own illustrated field guide after leading tours in the 1980s and 1990s and finding that existing field guides did not generally illustrate or describe alternate or juvenile plumages of birds. His Sibley Guide to Birds is considered by many to be the most comprehensive guide for North American field identification.He is married, with two sons, and currently lives in Massachusetts.
Location:
84 S. Pine Street
Doylestown, Pennsylvania 18901
Doylestown, Pennsylvania 18901
The Sibley Guide to Trees (Paperback)
$35.96
ISBN-13: 9780375415197Availability: On Our Shelves Now
Published: Knopf, 09/01/2009
The man who revolutionized the field guide to birds now brings his
formidable skills of identification and illustration to the more than
six hundred tree species of North America. Similar in size and format
to The Sibley Guide to Birds, the layout for this guide is
another triumph of logic and concision. Species are arranged
taxonomically, not by features such as leaf shape (as in most other
guides), which will enable the user to browse the images to find a
match for an observed tree in the same way a birder uses the bird
guide. And all pages will follow the same format, allowing the user to
pinpoint particular information with ease. David Sibley’s meticulous,
exquisitely detailed paintings illustrate the cycles of annual and
lifetime development, and reveal even the very subtle similarities and
distinctions between like elements of different species: bark, leaves,
needles, cones, flowers, fruit, twigs, and silhouettes. More than four
hundred maps show the complete range, both natural and cultivated, for
nearly all the species. Issues of conservation, preservation, and
environmental health are addressed in authoritative essays. As
innovative, comprehensive, and indispensable as The Sibley Guide to Birds, this new book will set the standard of excellence in field guides to trees.
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