BIRD BOOKS 
BY MRS. OLIVE THORNE MILLER 
TRUE BIRD STORIES 
From My Note-Books 
Illustrated by Fuertes, and with a colored frontispiece. i2mo, 
$1.00, net. Postpaid $1.08. 
“ The stories are short, engaging, and authentic, — each developing some curious 
incident in bird life.” — The Dial. 
THE FIRST BOOK OF BIRDS 
With many Illustrations, including eight full-page colored plates. 
Square i2mo, $1.00. School Edition , 60 cents, net , postpaid. 
THE SECOND BOOK OF BIRDS 
Bird Families. With many Illustrations, including 8 full-page 
colored plates. Square 121110, $1.00, net. Postage, 10 cents. 
“ Charming series of chapters on the life, dress, habits, qualities, travels, lan¬ 
guage, and other peculiarities of the little feathered creatures. The books will 
interest young people in the study of birds and stimulate them to further study.” 
— Boston Herald. 
UPON THE TREE-TOPS 
With ten Illustrations by J. Carter Beard. i6mo, $1.25. 
“ Bird individualities are studied with minute care, and every little manifestation 
of character is dwelt upon in a way that brings the reader at once into sympathetic 
relation with the very human ways of the birds.” — The Book Buyer, New York. 
LITTLE BROTHERS OF THE AIR 
i6mo, $1.25. 
“ In this book the author tells of king-birds, thrashers, pewees, bluebirds, 
thrushes, blue jays, bobolinks, robins, and even crows, bringing us into closer ac¬ 
quaintance with these little brothers of the air.” — Lowell Times. 
A BIRD-LOVER IN THE WEST 
i6mo, $1.25. 
“ Bright, piquant narratives, embodying the noteworthy incidents occurring in 
her observation of Western birds.” — The Dial , Chicago. 
BIRD-WAYS 
i6mo, $1.25. Also in Riverside School Library, 6o cents, net. 
“ The author gives the result of her own observation of birds, either in the 
natural open-air life, or in the mild captivity in which they become her intimate 
companions.” — Philadelphia - American . 
IN NESTING TIME 
i6mo, $1.25. 
“ A record of careful and most sympathetic observations of bird-life and Habit, 
by a genuine lover of nature. It is a truly charming chronicle.” N.Y. Tribune. 
Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston and New York 
