Great for the starter naturalist, like me.
As a kid, I was never a big fan of nature except for the beach and river. As an adult, I'm trying to connect more with nature and thought a nature journal would be great because I already am an avid journaler. This was the perfect book to start with. It has basic techniques for how to draw things.
What I didn't love was the seemingly endless talk about "bins" (birder slang for binoculars). Compared to the other topics of the book, I felt like she went too much into detail about the binoculars and too little detail into how to (for example) add color to your drawings. Don't get me wrong, getting a good set of binoculars is a good idea, but for this starter naturalist it was a bit much. I ended up dozing off and losing focus.
As for the Kindle edition, I always appreciate when books have page numbers instead of the awkward Kindle location, and this one has page numbers. Plus, the footnotes pop up instead of taking you to another page. At least for me, it's distracting when a footnote jumps to another page. So, I really appreciated that this book had the pop-up footnotes.
Apart from that, I only found one typo. I didn't even write it down because it simply needed a space. It didn't affect my reading experience at all.
All in all, I give this book 4.5 stars but since I really enjoyed it, I'm rounding it up. I recommend this book to anyone like me, who is interested in starting a nature journal.