Butterfly Book [SAFE]
A butterfly book without range maps is just a coffee table decoration. The best guides place the map directly on the same page as the species description (not 200 pages away in an appendix). You need to see at a glance whether you are looking at an Eastern Tiger Swallowtail or its rare, western cousin.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, the study of entomology was a gentleman’s pursuit and a scholarly necessity. During this era, the butterfly book was a tome of immense value. Works like The Natural History of British Butterflies by E.B. Ford or the illustrated volumes of W.J. Holland became essential companions for explorers. butterfly book
To provide a comprehensive, accessible guide for amateur collectors and enthusiasts to identify butterflies in North America (north of the Rio Grande). Key Features Visual Documentation: The book is famous for its 48 plates in color-photography A butterfly book without range maps is just
An app gives you a name in two seconds. A book forces you to slow down. You must look at the wing shape, the eye spots, the flight pattern, the habitat. That struggle—flipping pages, comparing two similar plates—is where learning happens. Furthermore, a butterfly book does not require a signal, a battery, or a screen. It works in the deepest canyon and the rainiest forest. In the 18th and 19th centuries, the study
Get your copy today. The butterflies are waiting.
