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Rating:  Summary: Add this to your collection (but NOT as your ONLY book) Review: Great Book, GREAT Charts (the grey section), but I had to drop a star due to a lack of Messier Photos and the terrible binding. I don't know HOW the review can say "4th - 8th grade reading level". If you find a 4th grader who can absorb this excellent material, he/she's in the wrong class! This book takes you from ignorance to comprehension painlessly. It even lists wonderful items which can be seen with only a pair of binoculars. It explains everything in the charts, listing the Messier objects and describing them, ie. "9th magnitude open-armed galaxy". Includes solar system, moon, stars, and deep space. A well done book, lacking nothing as a "text book", but as a "Field Guide" the above listed deficiences are intolerable. Well worth the small price.
Rating:  Summary: Add this to your collection (but NOT as your ONLY book) Review: Great Book, GREAT Charts (the grey section), but I had to drop a star due to a lack of Messier Photos and the terrible binding. I don't know HOW the review can say "4th - 8th grade reading level". If you find a 4th grader who can absorb this excellent material, he/she's in the wrong class! This book takes you from ignorance to comprehension painlessly. It even lists wonderful items which can be seen with only a pair of binoculars. It explains everything in the charts, listing the Messier objects and describing them, ie. "9th magnitude open-armed galaxy". Includes solar system, moon, stars, and deep space. A well done book, lacking nothing as a "text book", but as a "Field Guide" the above listed deficiences are intolerable. Well worth the small price.
Rating:  Summary: An excellent pocket-sized guide for any amateur astronomer. Review: I concur with Barry Johnson's thoughtful review of Skyguide. I would like to point out that the book's "grey pages" are it's finest feature. The constellation charts and their accompanying descriptions are superb, and are the most useful of any that I have seen in this size format. Contrary to the publisher's reading level description at he top of the page - the level is NOT 4 to 8 -- this is not a "children's" book. The reading level is 8 to adult. For a much more basic and simplified introduction to astronomy with younger enthusiasts in mind I would recommend Herbert S. Zim's "Stars" by the same publisher. By the way both of these books have been revised for the "90's".
Rating:  Summary: Explains basic concepts of astronomy, color illustrations Review: SKYGUIDE teaches the basic concepts of astronomy using color illustrations so that older children and adults will understand. Parents looking for a first book on the subject for an interested child need search no farther. SKYGUIDE can also be good for parents themsleves.SKYGUIDE covers the earth in space, the sun, moon, comets and planets, along with eclipses, tides, seasons, sundials, earth's atmosphere, aurorae, galaxies, star clusters, as well as stars and their spectra. Also included are sky maps that show the constellations, along with more detailed maps of individual constellations. These are combined with tables of useful astronomical information, such as a list of the brightest stars, and a table of double and multiple star systems that are suitable for viewing with binoculars or a small telescope. All this makes SKYGUIDE an enjoyable introduction to the study of astronomy.
Rating:  Summary: Best book, worst binding... Review: The definitive field guide for astronomers. It covers everthing from telescopes, to star types, to star charts, to the constellations, and our solar system. Full color pictures, illustrations, formulas, and definitions make this book a serious resource.
Rating:  Summary: This field guide should be in every astronomer's pocket Review: The definitive field guide for astronomers. It covers everthing from telescopes, to star types, to star charts, to the constellations, and our solar system. Full color pictures, illustrations, formulas, and definitions make this book a serious resource.
Rating:  Summary: Best book, worst binding... Review: The one and only knock against this great field guide (and kudos to the others who have pointed out that it's NOT a children's book, but simply the best introductory handbook to astronomy ever published) is that it will fall apart with regular use within a couple of years. This is inexcusable in a field guide, but the book is so wonderful and user-friendly that it still gets my five stars. If I could split the review: the book would get 5 stars, the publisher 0 stars. But it's so cheap compared to other guides, like the lousy Norton's Star Atlas, that you can afford another when it shreds in your hands after a couple years use at the scope. Bottom line: great book, but should be sewn-bound!!!
Rating:  Summary: A very Handy Little Reference Review: This little book is a great reference that handles most any issue an amateur astronomer might encounter in his gazing exploits. There is a thorough yet concise treatment of Basic Astronomy, followed by sections on Astronomical Instruments, Stars, The Various planets, and other celestial bodies. The illustrations and charts are wonderful and there is a very thorough treatment of each constellation, many tables, a good bibliography, and index of observatories and planetariums. It amazing what has been packed into this very small book!
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