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The Book of Clever Beasts: Studies in Unnatural History

Chapter 3: BIBLIOGRAPHY
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About This Book

A witty collector of natural anecdotes relocates to a rural cabin with his cat and keeps an observation ledger while recounting a series of animal sketches. Each chapter treats a different creature through humorous, anthropomorphic episodes that mix mock-scientific classification, imaginative field notes, and playful illustration. The pieces alternate between gentle satire of nature-writing and affectionate portraits of animal behavior, closing with an appendix and bibliographic acknowledgments that situate the lighthearted vignettes within contemporary natural-history reading.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Although practically all the Nature Books of recent years have been carefully studied in order to gather material for this volume, the author desires to make grateful acknowledgment of her indebtedness to the following works, which have proved particularly helpful and suggestive:

  • John Burroughs:
      • Squirrels and Other Fur-Bearers.
      • “Real and Sham Natural History,” Atlantic Monthly, March, 1903.
  • William Davenport Hulbert:
      • Forest Neighbours.
  • Ernest Ingersoll:
      • Wild Life of Orchard and Field.
  • William J. Long:
      • A Little Brother to the Bear.
      • Beasts of the Field.
      • Ways of Wood Folk.
      • Wood Folk at School.
      • Secrets of the Woods.
      • Wilderness Ways.
      • “The Modern School of Nature Study and its Critics,” North American Review, May, 1903.
  • Charles G. D. Roberts:
      • The Heart of the Ancient Wood.
      • The Kindred of the Wild.
  • Ernest Thompson-Seton:
      • Wild Animals I Have Known.
      • Lives of the Hunted.
  • Mason A. Walton:
      • A Hermit’s Wild Friends.
THE BOOK OF CLEVER BEASTS