Customer Reviews:
Easiest, most thorough insect guide October 8, 2007 This very large text is THE text for insect identification in eastern north america. The keys are relatively easy to follow (as long as you have a dissecting scope), and the parts are even pointed to in the keys, so you know which part of the insect the author is referring to. Also great about this guide is that it includes arachnids, which some other guides don't include. The colour photographs are excellent, they are clear and make identification much easier when used with the keys. I used this text to identify insect samples for research, and as an absolute amateur I was able to use the text. If you have this guide, the only reason you would need any other insect book would be for field use; this book is way too huge for carrying around outside.
Simply the best book on insects I have ever seen. September 4, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I have seen many books on insects, from the Peterson's field guide series to lesser-known works, and none come even remotely close to the coverage, the image quality, or containing the sheer number of insects as does this book. The images are fantastic, the introductory texts to each insect group are informative and anything but dry, and at the end is a good section on observing insects and then a set of highly usable and clear keys to help all budding entomologists identify their insects.
The book is specific to the insects of eastern North America (but many species are found continent-wide, too), and some of the species pictured are to be found in the south, others in the north of the book's area of coverage. The identification keys are likely to work on all common to uncommon examples of the groups of insects to be found in all of Canada and the U.S., but to use the keys some magnification tool is needed (a good hand magnifying lens to dissection microscope). For someone wanting to put names to their collected insects, the keys are worth the purchase price of this book alone.
Though extremely useful for identification, this is NOT a field guide -- it contains over 700 typewriter-size pages bound in hardcover -- it will NOT fit comfortably in your back pocket or your day bag. But, as a professional entomologist I have found it useful to refer to it when someone has brought me an insect -- more often than not it is in the book with a good photograph.
I highly recommend this book to anyone with an interest in entomology (the study of insects): gardeners, nature-enthusiasts, collectors, etc. Children will be fascinated by the pictures of "bugs", and this book will hopefully spur a number of them to take up entomology as an entertaining and educational hobby, if not a profession.
Finally, at full price this book is a steal. I have paid much more for lesser quality texts, and if you can snap this up at the reduced price the better for you!
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