First, as a photographic art book, it includes lots of large-format images of moths and butterflies, and it's intended to convey the intricacy and beauty of these creatures. Of course, images of beautiful butterflies are commonplace; but images of moths are not: moths are most usually thought of as dull, brown nuisances which eat your clothes (only 2-3 species out of several thousand actually do eat animal fur such as wool or fur; the vast bulk eat live plant material). Of the approx 125 species featured, approx 80% are moths, while the remainder are butterflies. The book aims to show that moths are beautiful and deserve 'respect'. Second, the book is a reference/information guide, containing general information about moths and butterflies (including some information which, though dealt with simply and briefly, is reasonably scholarly, in that even people with a general interest in lepidoptery might find information they didn't previously have). Of course there are already several reference works - some of them very complete - for identifying moths and butterflies. But these are often bewildering, since they usually cover the moths and/or butterflies of Britain and Ireland, or even of Europe. The sheer number of species covered in such books - the vast bulk of which are not found in one locality - can make such books difficult to use. This books covers not all, but many of, the moths and butterflies which may be spotted specifically in Connemara - a region which is remote and which possesses its own special mix of habitats: acid soils, bogland, heathland, relatively few trees, coastal margins...The book also contains a chapter which very specifically links the totality of the species contained to the Connemara habitat. It contains information (and images) concerning some of the lesser know