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George Laycock

Author of The Wonder of Birds

57+ Works 757 Members 9 Reviews

About the Author

George Laycock worked as a full-time author, journalist, and photographer for many years. He has written more than fifty books and has contributed articles to Audubon, Readers Digest, Outdoor Life, and many other magazines. He lives in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Includes the name: Laycock George

Works by George Laycock

The Wonder of Birds (1983) 153 copies, 2 reviews
The Mountain Men (1988) 127 copies
The alien animals (1966) 49 copies, 1 review
The Bird Watcher's Bible (1976) 44 copies, 1 review
Mysteries Monsters and Untold Secrets (1978) 40 copies, 1 review
How Settlers Lived (1980) 22 copies
The Deer Hunter's Bible (1977) 19 copies
The shotgunner's bible (1969) 17 copies
North American Wildlife (1983) 14 copies
How to Buy and Enjoy a Small Farm (1978) 14 copies, 1 review
Hunters and the Hunted (1990) 14 copies
Tornadoes Killer Storms (1979) 12 copies
Caves (1976) 12 copies
The Wild Bears (1986) 10 copies
The diligent destroyers (1970) 10 copies
Death Valley (1976) 10 copies
Never Pet a Porcupine (1965) 9 copies
Autumn of the Eagle (1973) 9 copies
Squirrels (1975) 7 copies
Water pollution (1972) 4 copies
Never trust a cowbird (1966) 4 copies
Islands and their mysteries (1977) 4 copies, 1 review
Bats in the night (1981) 4 copies
Beyond the Arctic Circle (1978) 4 copies
People and other mammals (1975) 3 copies
Hunting with bow & arrow (1965) 3 copies
The Pelicans 2 copies
Wild animals, safe places (1973) 2 copies
Wild refuge (1969) 2 copies
King Gator 1 copy
Air pollution (1972) 1 copy

Associated Works

Outdoor holiday fun — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Marshall, Jeff
Birthdate
1921-05-29
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
Nick was the biggest black bear in the great Smoky Mountains National Park. He was also one of the cleverest. It didn't take them long to learn it was easy to beg or steal food from tourists who, despite warnings of park rangers, were very obliging when given the chance to take home-movies of a great black bear drinking Coke out of a bottle.

For the park ranger then, Nick had become a nuisance bear marked for extinction the next time he frightened campers or destroyed property. But to Johnny show more Swope, lived on a farm just outside the limits of the park, Nick was a magnificent creature, the symbol of all wild animals. Johnny had freed Nick from a trap when he was a tiny bear cub, too small to survive without his mother. Johnny had fed him and kept him warm, and somehow the giant bear seem to almost remember.

Next life in the great Smoky Mountains is both comic and tragic as he moves through the natural pattern of life in the wild and skirts the edges of civilization, where man either hunts and with guns or spoils them with hand-outs.
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It is an excellent coffee table-sized book filled with the most splendidly beautiful photographs as National Geographic is as well-known to capture as I've ever seen. It also has well-written compositions by nature writers from Audubon, the Smithsonian, Natural History, etc., about bird natural history and conservation efforts. Any bird lover would want this book.
This is a coffe table sized book filled with the most stunningly beautiful photographs I've ever seen. It also has well written essays by nature writers from Audobon, the Smithsonian, Natural History, etc., about bird natural history and conservation efforts. Any bird lover would want this book. Highly recommended!
Wasn't too impressed with this one. A good summary of the classics, like Nessie and Bigfoot, but no new insights or information. There are a few mysteries in the book that I'd never heard of though, like the strange Oak Island treasure hunts.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
57
Also by
1
Members
757
Popularity
#33,605
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
9
ISBNs
78

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