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Turn Left at Orion: A Hundred Night Sky Objects to See in a Small Telescope - and How to Find Them

By: Guy Consolmagno Dan M. Davis
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 0521781906
ISBN-13: 9780521781909
Released: 01 Nov 2000
RRP: £20.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

get someone to buy it for you - By: Mr. M. B. Landeryou, 28 Apr 2008
if you are interested in imaging, forget it. there is no info on what the variouse targets can look like when photographed, only how to find them. a companion book on how too image & what to use is recomended.
The Novice Stargazer's Bible - By: Mr. David R. Hale, 06 Mar 2008
Ask any amateur astronomer what the first book they would recommend to a novice, & the majority will tell you this very book.

Written in a style that is user friendly yet not patronising, it carefully details the highlights of the night sky (by season), giving ratings for each target. All the information on how to find that elusive nebula or galaxy etc is here, along with realistic sketched views through the scope (and finderscope) from a 'normal' viewing site.

Rather than showing each target as a HST or large observatory scope photograph, leading to frustration from the novice, this book is refreshingly honest at what the back garden stargazer will see.

Along with the catalogue of targets (with excellent descriptions of what you are looking at), there is plenty of information on how to set up scopes, what equipment to use & other general advice needed for the novice/amateur astronomer.

I've yet to see a book that covers amateur observations so well.


All that the novice needs - By: T. G. Lee, 22 Nov 2006
Put simply, if a novice astronomer with ANY size of telescope buys only one book to assist them, then this should be it (or at least the most recent version of it should be). I'm actuallly a fairly experienced amateur astronomer with an appallling inability to navigate my way round the skies - at least I did have until I had this book bought for me. Broken down into seasonal sections with indications of the right conditions to go looking for particular objects, I can't think of anything that could make the task easier (short of someone actuallly finding the objects for you!). It is such a good book I can forgive it a few typos & some lapses of English grammar.

My advice - buy this book!
Every bit as good as they all say !! - By: Astro Novice, 24 Jul 2006
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Well, what else is there to say about this book ?

In a nutshell, it transformed me from clueless beginner to starhopper & DSO finder in 2 hours flat. I have a 200mm Newtonian & I find the book perfect for this scope even though it is aimed primarily at users of smalll scopes. For a novice it beats a straightforward atlas hands down, giving clear step by step hops to each object. There's much more to this book than mere instructions as well. There's very good info on every single object too, so you find something, then read about it at the time you're observing it. Also, having found a number of the "summer" objects at the 1st attempt I'm very happy that I've failed to find some of the objects listed as these will become targets when I'm more practiced, so the book will remain useful for a long time, & probably forever, as the quickest way to re visit favourite objects.
An utter gem. - By: Dr. Adrian Lord, 10 Jun 2006
This book is perfect. It take the reader & builds his interest in observing just at the point where without it the new scope would end up in the cupboard under the stairs & never be seen again until cleared out by the wife several years later & given away to a distant nephew.

The frission of finding the objects in the book never pallls.