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| Best Sellers Rank | #145,235 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #199 in Astronomy (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (1,743) |
| Dimensions | 11 x 0.88 x 10.75 inches |
| Edition | 4th |
| Grade level | 5 - 12 |
| ISBN-10 | 155407147X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1554071470 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 192 pages |
| Publication date | September 12, 2006 |
| Publisher | Firefly Books |
S**A
A Must-have, but...
I can't recommend Night Watch enough for a beginner. Dickinson's information is essential in beginning to understand how to observe the sky (day or night), how to select and purchase astronomical gear, and it comes with many sky charts to get you started with observation and with astrophotography. It is a delight to read and packed with useful and interesting information that is easy to understand even for those with little or no previous knowledge of astronomy. And the photographs are many and marvelous! The "but..." in my title refers to that fact that, as a few reviewers have noted, Night Watch is very much a BOOK in addition to a guide. This means that the charts and the tips on how to actually use them are surrounded by lots of TEXT. I love the text and think it is helpful and interesting, but it is important to read Night Watch BEFORE heading out to your backyard to stargaze. Otherwise you might be jaded like a reviewer or two I have seen who wait to crack open the book until their are outside itching to locate the Whirlpool Galaxy. If you already have some knowledge of stargazing and are looking for a quick grab-and-go handbook with long, detailed lists of objects to locate, you aren't looking for Night Watch. In conclusion, BEGINNERS - purchase with confidence! Dickinson can help anyone start stargazing, understand the mysteries of the objects in our skies, and purchase their first pair of binoculars or telescope. Night Watch may be the only observing guide you'll need. For the truly hard-core and those who own/will buy a telescope, I recommend also investing in a subscription to Astronomy magazine or Sky & Telescope. Don't forget your red flashlight - red to preserve your night vision. Dickinson mentions wrapping a flashlight in "red plastic," but he should add my very favorite old tip - buy a roll of red tail light tape and stick it on one of the old flashlights you've got lying around. Very cheap and effective! NON-BEGINNERS, if you're just looking for a long list of objects to find and how to find them, look elsewhere.
B**3
The reviews say it all, for any beginner (and even interm.) this book is a must!
The reviews say it all on this book. It gives you a great analysis of amateur stargazing and telescoping. I found the best thing was the back charts. He includes 20 charts of the constellations and what an amateur stargazer can expect to see within each constellation (what galaxy's, nebulas, binary stars, etc). It was awesomely educational. His comment on the Andromeda galaxy was spot on. I was so disappointed in what I saw the first time I looked at this galaxy cause all it was was a white blob. I was almost turned off right there, saying to myself, ARE YOU serious this is what Im going to see thru my scope, what a disappointment. But this guy really explains the best things to see in the sky and he harners your expectations by saying you will not see anything like you see in magazines because those pictures are photographed and layered for hours. Realizing that I got right back into it and read how there are ton of other things that are much better to look at and the reason the Andromeda galaxy is so blurry is the fact that its 2.5M Light Years away! Its actually the farthest object in the sky one can see with the naked eye (of course in optimal conditions). Realizing all that I moved on and was much more impressed of other objects he suggested...PLanets are the best in my view, Orion Nebula is awesome too, and binary stars are very cool. Understanding this, my love of stargazing is just beginning and the more I know the more I am completely in awe. His best advice, and he is SPOT on, is buy binoculars first. Learn and educate yourself of the sky before trying to blindly point your scope in the sky. The rewards will be great. Knowing your way around and educating yourself of the immense beauty of this universe is the biggest reward you will receive. BUY THIS BOOK!
F**Y
It fires you up !!!
I am loving this book to the core. Reasons are very simple. You can go directly go to bulletted reasons by skipping my short story below. I love astronomy so much, nature is simply awesome. Part of that I wanted to do stargazing and did not know where to start. Thinking its so easy if we just had the telescope and I ordered celestron 4se 4" telescope. First day gazed at moon (awesome)...after few days..Venus (wow!) ... and then tried Mars (not so much details i can make out) ... and then I am done... dont know where to go and what to look for in the cosmic ocean..everywhere I look I see a star and whatever magnification your telescope has doesnt matter it will still look like a star because they are simply too far away. so you get bored rt? until you know so much about each point of light up in the sky what it is? is it a double star? nebula? galaxy? star cluster? galactic cluster?etc.,etc., My telescope and interest are cold and packed up to my basement... And then I came to know about this book and started reading it. - It really draws you in - Fires up your interest - Its like a navigation system which teaches you to navigate on your own. not letting you go for the book all the time when you want to navigate up in the sky - Takes step by step approach so that you are not overwhelmed with the knowledge that you gain. - Like it starts of with our simple solar system and takes you to the deep like galactic super clusters - Beautiful color pictures - Season wise star charts - Nice tips and techniques on various topics - Very good guidelines in picking up your telescope and binocular Was able to do after reading this book: - Looked at jupiter and four of its moon - Know winter sky constellation and how to navigate and identify few different objects in the sky - Located orion nebula and WOW WOW its like costliest diamond jewel put on a beautiful cloud - Pleiades starclusters - learned what are the right time to see what objects - VariableStars and identifying them - Binary and multiple star systems' what else one can ask for?
M**S
Vale a pena cada centavos. Livro muito bem estruturado desde os conceitos básico até outros assuntos para quem já estudou e estuda astronomia. As astrofotografia e ilustrações bem feitas levam a uma experiência muito boa durante a leitura deste livro.
J**Z
easy to understand even for people with zero experience in stargazing
M**2
L'ho comprato per imparare a 'leggere' il cielo notturno, avere una mappa solare, e alcune indicazioni circa l'acquisto del mio primo telescopio. Se quest'ultimo punto può mostrare le debolezza di un approccio non solo necessariamente semplicistico, ma anche ovviamente senza poter parlare degli effettivi prodotti in commercio (marche, prezzi, ecc); ma questo è anche un punto di forza che ci fa capire cosa conta davvero in un telescopio, e per cosa lo potremo usare - e specialmente non usare. Divulgativo ma non banale tutto il resto; ho imparato tantissime informazioni. Non eccezionale la rilegatura ad anelli fino a che non si usi la mappa stellare: a quel punto si ringraziano gli editori per la scelta... Consigliato.
A**A
This will interest most people in to doing at least one session of star gazing. This is something everyone should do before they die. Dickinson is a master at making it all so easy and obvious USING ONLY YOUR EYES. A set of cheap binoculars is handy for looking at the moon when you can't see what everyone else claims they can in the stars. Highly recommended.
H**L
I have had this book for some 3 weeks now. I am still find it amazing. I first came across this book when on holiday in Oz. A receptionist had it on display, amongst other stargazing books. She did demonstrations for hotel visitors and gave a fasinating talk, and view through a telescope of the stars. I am thinking of buying another one, for my mother. The book is well written and not much maths in it, (thank goodness). It is very easy to understand and, at the same time, causes your brain to 'stretch' as you try to conceptualise the vastness of it all. Brilliant.
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