"Cornell University Press has made this herpetological classic available to a wider audience in a facsimile edition that looks nearly identical to the original, with excellent reproduction of both text and photographs. Nobody writes books like this anymore, and it is a shame.... As the afterword by Whit Gibbons makes clear, Wright's observations are as valuable today as they were 70 years ago. Only three nomenclatural changes have been made since Wright's day, and one of these, Pseudacris occidentalis, is one that Wright himself later recognized was a nonexistent species.... Gibbons discusses current concerns about declining amphibian populations and the importance of the Okefenokee Swamp National Wildlife Refuge as a haven for species that may be declining elsewhere in the Southeast."