

The Iridescent Life of Florence Merriam Bailey
Review posted October 1, 2025.
Alfred A. Knopf, 2025. 40 pages.
Review written July 21, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review
I love it when picture book biographies tell me about a person who lived a remarkable life and changed the world - but whom I'd never heard of before. This is one such book.
In 1889, Florence Merriam Bailey wrote the first field guide to American birds ever published. She talked about the wonders of birdwatching and popularized it for everyone.
This picture book tells her story with gorgeous art - as befitting a book about beautiful birds. (As a bonus, at the back, there's a spread showing Florence's favorite bird species and asking if you can find all these birds in the pages of the book.) It begins with her childhood in the countryside, when she would delight in finding them. When she got old enough to study birds as a scientist, she didn't like the normal method at the time of examining dead birds and making them into specimens. So she would take notes on living birds in the outdoors.
When she went to university, Florence made friends with other women interested in birds and showed them her method of taking notes on birds in the wild. The women were scandalized together at the common fashion choice of the time - wearing dead birds on ladies' hats.
It began a quest to share with people the wonder of birds in the wild - and helped pass the Lacey Act in 1900 that protected birds from illegal trade.
The way the story is told lifts your hearts with the birds and will add to your own appreciation. A lovely book about a woman who helped protect these lovely creatures.