clitocybe clavipes

Mushroom
Books
Reviewed


One of the real difficulties for amateur mushroom hunters is deciding how to get started. While many rely on local "experts", others prefer to learn it for themselves, but then they have to decide which books they can trust to get started with. Well, I have some suggestions which may help, and some annotations concerning my dozen best selections. These, again are the opinion of a mid-range amateur, and the way you value books may differ considerably from mine. I will also confess some prejudice in favor of the first books from which I learned identification skills.

I have some personal standards for preferred books, listed below in roughly decreasing importance. You might be surprised to see me including some older Dover reprints, but those older books relied a lot more on good descriptions than they did on photos. Watch out, though for nomenclature changes: One of our family favorites, commonly called "blewits", or "wood blewit" has been known variously as "lepista nuda", "tricholoma nudum", "tricholoma personatum", "rhodopaxillus nuda", "gyrophila nuda", and "clitocybe nuda", the latter being the most popular of late.

Ralph's Book Criteria
  • Books should have a key: a series of questions starting with spore print color, and getting down to very small details as the answer to each question branches further down to more questions, ending with a species

  • Keys should be a little bit forgiving: If I have a subtle difference in opinion about gill connectivity, or whether a spore print is purplish black vs black, the key should guide me back rather than leaving me in a clearly wrong selection

  • Primary emphasis should be on identification far more than on edibility

  • Photos should be of adequate quality to help validate the text identification, including evidence of special features

  • Text should differentiate within context of an edible species, others which amateurs may confuse with it

  • Text should contain clear safety rules for beginners, about identifying, first taste, discriminating

  • It's really nice when books have enough species that it gets difficult to find one not covered. Unforgiving keys and small numbers leave beginners in lots of dead-ends

  • My favorite books include non-key details which characterize a species such as the faintly anise aroma of pleurotus ostreatus, or the little black beetles which run around in its gills, or the faint odor of bleach or almonds associated with large messes of marasmius oreades, or the deeper green of grass near their fairy rings, or something about which trees the species is most associated with

  • I like to see a good glossary at the back of the book: technical terms, while perhaps confusing to the beginner, help paint very specific verbal pictures of species

  • I think it helps to identify a few good species which are lower in risk for beginners to start with, but I don't go along with the "foolproof" label - I've met too many talented fools for that

  • It's nice to have a bit of background information about mushrooms, mushroom growth and habitats

  • Good North American field guides stick to North American Species....Learning what we have around here is tough enough without the added confusion of European look-alikes...Similar criteria should apply to European books

Ralph's Favorite Books
title author publisher year species score comments
Mushrooms Demystified David Arora Ten Speed 1986 2000 90% pix mostly b/w, text entertaining, good differentiation, excellent tech ref's
Mushroom Hunter's Field Guide Smith & Weber U Mich 1980 282 83% rigid key, good beginners info
Mushrooms of North America Orson K Miller Dutton 1977 422 75% good key, good pix, good charact, weak rules
Foraging for Edible Wild Mushrooms Haard & Haard Cloudburst 1978 36 75% rigid key, good beginners info, mostly b/w pix, good differentiation, too few species
The Mushroom Manual Lorentz C. Pearson Naturegraph 1987 300 71% good key, good beginners info, b/w sketches, good for beginners, good differentiation
The Gilled Mushrooms of Michigan (two vol's) C.H. Kauffman Dover (1918) 884 69% good key, b/w photos, fair differentiation, unique characteristics
Mushrooms (Peterson Field Guide) McKnight & McKnight Houghton Mifflin 1987 500 68% no key, color sketches, good differentiation, good rules
Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mushrooms Gary Lincoff Knopf 1981 756 61% pictorial key, good color photos, good differentiation
Macmillan Field Guide Mushrooms Bessette & Sundberg Macmillan 1987 200 55% no key, color photos, good differentiation, good rules, spore data
Mushrooms of North America Roger Phillips Little Brown 1991 1000 50% fair key, color photos, no differentiation
One Thousand American Fungi McIlvane & Macadam Dover (1902) 1000 50% fair key, b/w sketches, little differentiation, fair on unique features
Simon & Schuster's Guide to Mushrooms Gary Lincoff Fireside 1981 420 49% good key, good color photos, admixes European species


mushroom
HomePage
safety
rules
favorite
fungi
mushroom
links
Ralph's
page
Family
page

background
courtesy of
Kim Anderson
wish to
communicate?
Czere@cris.com
photos and artwork
© Ralph Czerepinski
1996
Thursday, 29-Feb-96 18:20:21 EST