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The Birds of Great Britain - Vol. 5 is an unchanged, high-quality reprint of the original edition of 1873. Hansebooks is editor of the literature on different topic areas such as research and science, travel and expeditions, cooking and nutrition, medicine, and other genres. As a publisher we focus on the preservation of historical literature. Many works of historical writers and scientists are available today as antiques only. Hansebooks newly publishes these books and contributes to the preservation of literature which has become rare and historical knowledge for the future.
John Mead Gould's 'How to Camp Out' stands as a testament to the timeless appeal of exploring the great outdoors. This riveting guide blends practical advice with an evocative narrative that captures the heart of 19th-century expeditionary spirit. The manual not only imparts knowledge on the rudiments of camping but does so with a literary flair that belies its instructive nature. Characterized by meticulous detail and charming anecdotes, Gould's work situates itself within a larger context of American nature writing, echoing the transcendentalist movement's appreciation for the wild. It is not merely a collection of tips but a work that defines the cultural milieu of a country still deeply ...
Gould is widely regarded as the father of ornithology in Australia, and The Birds of Australia (1848) as the greatest of his 18 works. Isabella Tree's lively biography reveals a story of discovery, ambition and betrayal, touching on some of the greatest wonders of the Victorian era, including Gould's crucial role in Darwin's theory.
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For all the bird lovers, the definitive collection of hummingbird illustrations by 19th-century naturalist painter John Gould, the "British Audubon". This sublime collection of 418 superbly detailed hand-colored lithographs of hummingbirds, created by John Gould, the “British Audubon,” in the mid-1800s, represents all the known species at that time and is the most complete ever produced of hummingbirds. Unlike John James Audubon, whose work focused on the avifauna of a single country, Gould’s folios illustrate species from around the world. His original set of folios—Family of Humming-Birds—reproduced here in its entirety, depicts the magnificent jewel-like birds together with bota...
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Like a well-planned time capsule, Arkansas is a fascinating picture of the state's evolution: from a wilderness explored by Hernando de Soto to a rowdy and often lawless frontier, a partner in the shameful dislocation of Native Americans, a state in the Confederacy, a source of homegrown populists, and always a land of opportunity. As Harry S. Ashmore states in his introduction to this third volume of the John Gould Fletcher Series, "Arkansas still stands up as its author intended, a poet's imaginative treatment of a 'history both tragic and comic-with its deep legendary roots going far back into the remote prehistoric past.' It has earned a permanent place among the books that must be read by those who seek to understand the matrix in which new forces of economic and social change are reshaping Arkansas's traditional society."
When John Gould was young, a boy learned about the sea--and arithmetic and knots and geography and life--from the old deep-water men living out their lives in snug harbors. He grew up knowing the woods; the way a church supper smells; the way the Ladies Aid bargained together before a food sale. The friendly, close-knit community life and the deep family affection gave him a foundation of sound sense to last through the years ahead. This is a book to read and reread. You will be glad to know that once, in Maine, a boy could have this kind of childhood; and you might be envious because you did not.