Best seller! A super easy starter guide for beginner adults. Great for kids, too! Covers 100 of the most common birds in eastern North America. Birds are grouped according to their color: The user-friendly color tab index makes it easy to look up the birds. Includes beautiful, large, color photos of male and female. Includes identification clues, habitat, voice, nesting information, bird feeder and bird house preferences, and great tips on attracting the birds.
Donald W. Stokes and Lillian Q. Stokes are widely recognized as America's foremost authorities on birds and nature. Their books include the bestselling Stokes Field Guide to the Birds of North America, the Stokes Field Guide to Birds, the Stokes Beginner's Guide to Birds, the Stokes Nature Guides, and the Stokes Backyard Nature Books. They live in New Hampshire and Florida.
Good first field guide, separating by colors helps non-birders find and learn what they’re seeing. Liked that each backyard bird had a section on what attracts them to your feeders.
The book was the first bird book I ever had and it was gifted to me as a child. It is a wonderful tool for those who are just starting to notice birds around them and are wanting to begin learning how to identify them as it lists the most common species in the Eastern US.
The original copyright of the book is 1996, so some of the regions of particular species are outdated at this point and inaccurate. For example, the region of the double-crested cormorant indicates that it is not seen in most of the Great Lakes or in the eastern Midwest. There are large numbers of the species in Lake Erie in the fall and I've seen flocks of them in rural ponds in parts of Ohio even south of Columbus.
This is a great, cheap bird book to get if you are starting out and don't want to commit to a more thorough or expensive guide. For those newer birders, just be cognizant of the fact that the regions may be out of date for where you can see certain species and know that there are many, many more birds in the Eastern US than are indicated in this text, but you will at least have the big ones down. Happy birding!
Extremely simple guide for someone who's never been birding before. Great for kids also. It includes only the most common species, minimizing false ID's of the really rare species that are common among beginners. Sorted by color for fast field identification, includes multiple photos for different color morphs. Unfortunately there's generally only one photo per species, and no illustrations. There are a lot of species missing, and it will include many birds not necessarily present in your state so it's best to supplement it with a more in depth guide. However if all you're looking for is an introduction this is an excellent starter.
I began with this book, it helped me look at the birds in my environment a lot more closely, I augmented it with Petersons. Then I replaced it with Stan Tekiela's Birds of Massachusetts which has a similar color-based guide. But there may not be a Birds of... for your state.