Selected Journals and Other Writings (Penguin Nature Classics)

by John James Audubon

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The fist one-volume selection of nonornithological writings from one of America's premier naturalists and painters.

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This is a compilation of letters writen by Audubon, mostly to his wife. The letters convey almost nothing about wildlife and not even much about his day to day life during this period. I struggled through hundreds of letters and hundreds of pages and did not find any interesting story or events in that bulk. About the only thing that can be gained from the letters is that Audubon seemed to feel he was considerably superior to others in most ways. Most of Audubon's time during these letter writing years he states was taken up in writing to his wife and painting women's portraits for cash and that makes for dull reading.

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271+ Works 4,485 Members
The American ornithologist John James Audubon was born in 1785 in Haiti. His boyhood was spent in France. At the age of 18, he came to the United States and made his home in Pennsylvania.. As a young man, Audubon enjoyed observing birds. He organized the first bird-banding flights in the United States. In the 1830s, Audubon traveled to Florida and show more spent most of his time in the Florida Keys. Soon he conceived the idea of painting every species of American bird in its native habitat. To accomplish that goal, Audubon spent years traveling through wilderness areas enduring incredible hardships. His drawings and paintings of birds and other animals represent a combination of artistic talent and scientific observation. Unable to provide financially for his family, Audubon went to Great Britain in search of a publisher in 1826. Not only did he succeed in getting his work published there, Audubon also was made a member of the Wernerian Natural History Society and of the Royal Society. The Birds of America, in elephant folio size, was published in parts between 1827 and 1938. The accompanying five-volume text, called Ornithological Biography (1831--39), was prepared largely in Edinburgh, Scotland, in collaboration with William MacGillivray. Returning to the United States in 1836, Audubon dined with President Andrew Jackson and received a warm welcome from Daniel Webster and Washington Irving. While Audubon's drawings of birds and other animals were exceptional as art, they also influenced ornithologists and other zoologists to observe wildlife in natural settings. Audubon died in 1851. Audubon's two sons completed the Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, which Audubon had begun in collaboration with John Bachman. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Forkner, Ben (Editor)

Classifications

Genres
Science & Nature, Nonfiction, Travel, Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
598.092Natural sciences & mathematicsAnimalsBirdsOrnithology, birdwatching and field guidesGeographicalBiography
LCC
QL31 .A9 .A3ScienceZoologyZoologyGeneral
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Reviews
1
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Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
1