Sparrows are as complicated as they are common. This is an essential
guide to identifying 76 kinds, along with a fascinating history of human
interactions with them.
What, exactly, is a sparrow? All birders (and many non-birders) have
essentially the same mental image of a pelican, a duck, or a flamingo,
and a guide dedicated to waxwings or kingfishers would need nothing more
than a sketch and a single sentence to satisfactorily identify its
subject. Sparrows are harder to pin down. This book covers one family
(Passerellidae), which includes towhees and juncos, and 76 members of
the sparrow clan.
Birds have a human history, too, beginning with their significance to
native cultures and continuing through their discovery by science, their
taxonomic fortunes and misfortunes, and their prospects for survival in
a world with ever less space for wild creatures. This book includes not
just facts and measurements, but stories--of how birds got their names
and how they were discovered--of their entanglement with human history.