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A Guide to Night Sounds
Author: Lang Elliott
Publisher: Nature Sound Studio
Category: Book

List Price: $12.95
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 4247718

Media: Hardcover
Edition: Har/Cas
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.5 x 0.5

ISBN: 1878194038
Dewey Decimal Number: 508
EAN: 9781878194039
ASIN: 1878194038

Publication Date: April 1992
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
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Also Available In:

  • Paperback - A Guide to Night Sounds: The Nighttime Sounds of 60 Mammals, Birds, Amphibians, and Insects
  • Pamphlet - A Guide to Night Sounds (audio compact disc and 40-page booklet)
  • Audio Cassette - A Guide to Night Sounds (Audio Cassette and Book)
  • Hardcover - A Guide to Night Sounds

Similar Items:

  • The Songs of Insects
  • Guide To Wildlife Sounds
  • The Calls of Frogs and Toads
  • Common Birds and Their Songs (Book and Audio CD)
  • Music of the Birds: A Celebration of Bird Song

Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
As anyone who has been captivated by the sounds of an evening outdoors knows, the nightly music of the woods can be a lovely but bewildering mix of hoots, croaks, howls, and grunts. This handy collection of field recordings and species descriptions helps you to identify the various members of the nocturnal chorus, from crickets and owls to otters, porcupines, and alligators. Illustrated with gorgeous pencil drawings and full-color photographs, it's the perfect complement to the sounds of the night. Includes an hour-long audio CD of the nighttime sounds of 60 animals.


Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars A Taste of the Night   June 25, 2008
Night has always fascinated, and sometimes terrified, me. Blacklighting for moths alone in the Davis Mountains I heard in the distance the lonely calls of a group of coyotes - a sound that both thrilled me and made me uneasy. The sounds of a poorwill echoing through the canyons of Baja California's Sierra de la Giganta and whiskered screech owls near Geronimo Pass in the Peloncillo Mountains of Arizona-New Mexico gave the night a character that I will never forget.

My daughter gave me a copy of "A Guide to Night Sounds" for Fathers Day and I must say that it was great to hear some of the creatures I have heard on well-remembered nights and some that I have never heard, but hope to some day. Lang Elliot is a good narrator and does a great job of explaining the various sounds and behaviors associated with them.

My only complaint (and it is one that I'm sure many have) is that this just gives the listener a sampling of the huge variety of sounds one hears in the night. Around my house I hear night songs, not only from the mockingbird (which Elliott mentions along with the actual recording of a catbird), but also its close relative the curved-billed thrasher, which he implies has no night song. In recent times their night time chorus has been joined by the hoot of the great horned owl and in the close distance the wok of the black-crowned night heron. In rain storms both spadefoot and Bufo toads make considerable noise from the nearby fields. The list could go on and on, including broad-winged and cone-headed katydids, the barking of grey foxes and the chittering (just audible to some younger folk) of bats. I suppose that it would be hard to include everything and this CD contains a great sampling that leaves you with the wish for more. As in all of these works there seems to be a bias toward the eastern United States, but again this is where most of the people who work with animal sounds live, so I can't be too critical, I can only say that one day I hope a similar recording and book will emerge for mostly western creatures of the night.

I recommend this for those who would like to get at least a taste of the real night in nature.



1 out of 5 stars Defective   October 13, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I bought a book that comes with a CD: the CD is defective. It can no be played. I have written two letters asking what should I do. I want the product, but a need a CD that is not defective. No answer from Amazon.
I am very dissapointed. I am not buying another product until this matter is solved.



5 out of 5 stars What goes bump in the night   April 29, 2007
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

If you live in the woods or country and are curious about what goes bump in the night, this book and CD will explain those noises. We kept hearing a wonderful creature but had no way to identify it. Turns out it was a screech owl (they don't hoot nor do they screech). This book has also helped identify several frogs & night birds. As a bonus, Lang has a very pleasant voice and the CD is well made.


3 out of 5 stars Nice, but covers to large an area   January 11, 2006
 10 out of 13 found this review helpful

It's nice to listen to in the car (for a while, at least). It's pretty useless, though, since the geographical area is not limited enough. There might be a couple of those 60 animals in your area, but about 50 of 'em won't be. This should be a series of CD's: one for the northeast, one for the southwest....and so on.


4 out of 5 stars Soothing and informative   October 1, 2001
 11 out of 13 found this review helpful

I love Lang Elliott's voice. It is very soothing and doesn't detract from the bird, reptile and insect sounds. I was able to identify a Horned Owl from the CD, so it is informative, too. The sounds are grouped on different tracks so it's easy to find the category you want, much better than a cassette tape.

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