“Undoubtedly the finest guide to North American birds.”—Guy McCaskie, Birding The publication of The Sibley Guide to Birds, First Edition quickly established David Allen Sibley as the author and illustrator of the nation’s supreme and most comprehensive guide to birds. Used by millions of birders from novices to the most expert, The Sibley Guide became the standard by which natural history guides are measured. The highly anticipated second edition builds on this foundation of excellence, offering massively expanded and updated information, new paintings, new and rare species, and a new, elegant design. The second edition of this handsome, flexibound volume offers a wealth of improvements and • All illustrations reproduced 15 to 20 percent larger for better detail. • Includes nearly 7,000 paintings digitally remastered from original art for enhanced print quality. • Expanded text includes habitat information and voice description for every species and more tips on finding birds in the field. • More than 600 new paintings, including illustrations of 115 rare species and additional paintings of common species and regional populations. • More than 700 updated maps of ranges, showing winter, summer, year-round, migration, and rare ranges. • 85 bird family pages now cross-referenced to species accounts. • Revised taxonomic order and most current common names for every species. The Sibley Guide to Birds, second edition, brings the genius of David Allen Sibley to the world once again in a thoroughly updated and expanded volume that every birder must own.
What a tremendous resource. Really clear and detailed pictures. Good info for identifying birds. If you want to know more info on a certain one, though, you’ll have to dig deeper somewhere else. But at least this one book will allow you to ID what you’re looking at, and then you can take it from there.
This is my go to field guide. You can't beat the multiple illustrations of birds - in flight (from top and bottom), breeding v. non-breeding, male, female, and juvenile. This has got it all, plus comparison tips for very similar birds.
It's a mighty heavy tome to carry with you on a birding trip. Fortunately, that problem is solved for people with smart phones. The Sibley app is probably the most used application on my iPhone. It has all the info, plus the ability to record bird sightings by date and location.
the only reason i didn't slap 5 stars on this rascal is cuz he poopoos the existence of the ivory-bill. i have to believe they found one down in arkansas for the sake of my very soul. c'mon sibley! don't be a stick in the mud.
dude can flat-out draw some birds! hardcore draw some dang avian life!!!!
What can I add to what everyone else says? Only that, even though my eyes can no longer see birds' markings in the field, I'm keeping this guide. It's just so neat to look at a bird in all its different plumages.
Despite my grumpy son's complaints, I'm very fond of Sibley's guides to birds and trees, this one included. It's a bit bulky for a field guide, but still a reasonable reference book with lovely art.
This is my absolute favorite birding field guide. The illustrations are beautiful and more 'real' than any others I've used. Sibley does an amazing job of distilling the feel of the birds. Excellent range maps, illustrations of regional variation, and descriptions of appearance and vocalizations. I like the 'group accounts' format - family sections are started with side-by-side thumbnails of the birds for comparison.
Only a few criticisms. First off, I haven't ever used this as a real 'field guide' because frankly it's just big and heavy. Hard to justify lugging around in a backpack unless you're in a pretty unfamiliar area. That said, I do a lot of birding by car and if I'm traveling I'll always have this in my car or base camp. And there's the Western/Eastern sub-guides to help with this.
Also, I originally learned birds on the Nat Geo guide, which has a couple features I like and that are missing in this one. The biggest one in my mind are the phenomenal subspecific range maps at the end of the book. Sibley has a few subspecies distributions embedded in the main text, but for fewer species. Also, Sibley only uses common names for the subspecies, which can be confusing when trying to compare to other references. I also think the visual index to bird families inside the dust jacket of Nat Geo is a really fantastic resource for beginning birders trying to sift through their field guides; it's harder to get around in Sibley if you don't already know your birds well.
All in all though, I think this is the best single field guide for any ABA birder with a bit of experience.
Yes, you really do want to buy the second edition, even if you have the first edition. I made the mistake of buying the Eastern field guide first - then saw the first edition of the main Sibley guide to the birds of North America. Once you see the double-page spread of Red-tailed Hawks - you know that you absolutely positively MUST have this book.
Eventually, once the second edition came out, I found that I very much needed that one too. Fabulous books, with fabulous artwork.
I do have a couple of reservations regarding these books. There is a printing problem that shows up on just about every page - the colours on the maps are messed up. It really is remarkable that the publisher for these books, where colours are critically important, made this error. Other field guides that are nowhere near as good as these have managed to print maps with proper colours – so I am baffled how these errors were not caught before printing. And I am even more amazed that the second edition has problems too. These are not critical errors – more of an annoyance, really, easy to get past.
My other reservation is that there are ongoing problems with certain colours that show up in a number of his illustrations. Specifically, the reddish tones in a number of his illustrations are rather off. For example, I do not believe that there ever existed a glow-In-the-dark, ultra-red rufous morph of an Eastern Screech Owl, like the ones shown in the first edition, the second edition, and the eastern guide. Other birders have told me that these problems only occurred in one particular edition – but I really don’t believe it.
But don’t let my minor quibbles deter you from adding these wonderful field guides to your birding shelf.
Considered by birders (I don't think of myself as that educated or obsessive) as one of the definitive guides to birds. It is extensive, has lots of nicely drawn pictures by Sibley and good information. Like other bird books, it also seems to be organized in ways only real birders could appreciate. It would be wonderful if this were online and searchable in various ways. Still, if you find the bird you are looking for in there, it is going to be very helpful.
For mere mortals, I suggest downloading the Merlin app from Cornell to your phone. It is amazing. you can show it a picture of a bird, give it some colors and sizes or even just have it listen to the bird sing and it is very accurate. It also lets you keep a list of what you have sighted. Finally, it provides various views and pictures of bird (mature, immature, male female, in flight etc) that can be very helpful in identifying them.
An extraordinary guide, with stunning illustrations by David Sibley, of course.
Over the years I have progressively acquired most, if not all of the magnificent books illustrated by Sibley. The 2nd edition (2014) of this guide is astounding by the beauty of the drawings and the power of identification that the provide compared to any other guide I know.
The guide is not a pocket carry, and I keep it at home or in the car---I use the Sibley Birds West Guide in the field (it does not really fit in my back pocket either, but it is smaller).
Every time I open this guide, I am awed by the extraordinary drawings. I am sure you will be too. Get this book!
The definitive guide to North American birds. Every known North American species is portrayed both in flight and on the ground or water as appropriate, both as adults and various juvenile stages, in all common morphs and as both sexes. If it has feathers and it's in North America, its likeness is in this book, and using this book requires absolutely no prior knowledge of birding. This is the single best birding book to buy on the continent.
I use it in conjunction with Kaufman's Field Guid to Birds of North America. Sibley's is more complete but together they become a useful tool in identifying birds. I wrote that I finished the book - but this is not the kind of book one ever finishes. It will stay with me for a long time to come. A tremendous amount of work, research went into it.
I didn't read all of it, checking it out to look up cormorants, gulls, and warbles but also got caught up in learning about other species. But this is a beautiful exquisite volume with tons of information, including information about rare species who drift into our borders from other countries , or interbreed with other species. A wonderful resource.
4.5/5: This is my favorite bird field guide. I typically pair it with National Geographic’s 7th edition as I’m an amateur birder so I need multiple resources to confirm sightings. The pictures are slightly better in this so if I had to pick one it would be Sibley’s. Too large to take out with you in the field but contains a variety of illustrated examples of each bird to help identification.
David Allen Sibley is a very talented artist who has realised which are the most important and key features for identifying American birds. The drawings are not detailed, but this is balanced with all the extra information about behaviour.
This is more of a reference text than a book to read. The illustrations and information are very useful (especially when you're uncertain whether the bird at your feeder is a chicadee or a nuthatch), and the book is also entertaining for a toddler to look at!