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Mateship With Birds

di Carrie Tiffany

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1788154,237 (3.46)32
On the outskirts of an Australian country town in the 1950s, a lonely farmer trains his binoculars on a family of kookaburras that roost in a tree near his house. Harry observes the kookaburras through a year of feast, famine, birth, death, war, romance and song. As Harry watches the birds, his next door neighbour has her own set of binoculars trained on him. Ardent, hard-working Betty has escaped to the country with her two fatherless children. Betty is pleased that her son, Michael, wants to spend time with the gentle farmer next door. But when Harry decides to teach Michael about the opposite sex, perilous boundaries are crossed.… (altro)
  1. 00
    Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living di Carrie Tiffany (KimB)
    KimB: The author's first novel, dryly witty, pardon the pun :)
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I'm struggling to rate this book. There is much to be savoured. Lonely farmer Harry's loving and detailed accounts of the kookaburras he can see from his home. The odd, dependent relationship he has with neighbour Betty and her two children. Lonely childhoods. Sex, actual and imagined.

Somehow however, for me the story never gets off the ground. I love Tiffany's descriptive powers, her rich use of vocabulary. I may read more of her work. But this one? I shan't open it again. ( )
  Margaret09 | Apr 15, 2024 |
Mateship with Birds is the title of a book of nature notes by Alec Chisholm, first published in 1922, and of this quirky short novel set in a small town farming community in 1950s Australia. (Cohuna, Victoria, apparently 170 miles from Melbourne).

Farmer Harry observes a family of kookaburras, from reproductive rituals to family life, through his binoculars, and writes about what he sees in free verse. He also daydreams about his neighbour next door. Betty also has binoculars, only she isn't watching the birds....

I really liked the characterisation in this novel, especially Betty, single mother of two by choice who simply lets people assume her husband must have died in the war, and avoids gossip or scandal.

This is a story about watching and thinking, with lots of sex thrown in , bird sex and human sex. It takes time to piece together what is going on, but it turns out to be quite a witty and delightful story about two people and the others around them.

I received a review copy of this book through the Amazon Vine programme. ( )
  elkiedee | Nov 5, 2013 |
  jll1976 | Oct 2, 2013 |
I heard about this book when it won the inaugural Stella Prize, an Australian prize for women writers of fiction and non-fiction. From the description of the novel I was sure I would like it. However, my library didn't have it in their catalogue yet so I took out Tiffany's first book, Everyman's Rules for Scientific Living. I loved that book and so I was primed to like this one. And fortunately my library acquired a copy.

This book is set in the Australian countryside in the 1950s. Aside from the descriptions of the birds, I know this place because it is almost identical to where and when I grew up in Canada. Harry runs a dairy farm and next door is an unmarried woman, Betty. Harry is divorced; his wife decided she hated the farm and ran off with a birdwatching friend of Harry's. Betty doesn't seem to have been married but she is certainly a mother with two children. She works in the small town as a nurse in a senior's care home. She and Harry are friendly and both would probably like more but neither wants to make the first move. Harry stands in as a father to the kids, a boy entering puberty and a girl. Harry and Betty may not be having sex but there's a lot of it going on between other people, between animals, between birds and, in one disgusting case, between a person and an animal. Harry and Betty are also thinking about sex a lot.

This is a humourous book in places but also profound. Harry, especially, thinks a lot about life, people, nature and likes to record his thoughts. So these details get passed along to the reader. I recommend it. ( )
  gypsysmom | Sep 26, 2013 |
Carrie Tiffany has just released her second novel called Mateship With Birds. Cute and quirky, the novel is set in the Australian outback in 1953. On his farm, Harry, a middle-aged bachelor, understands life through his observations of the wild birds on his farm. Betty, his single-mom neighbour, is making observations of her own and has her eyes (and binoculars) trained on Harry. When Harry is called upon to explain the facts of life to Betty’s son Michael, he instinctively turns to his birds for inspiration.
  vplprl | Aug 1, 2013 |
The trouble is that, having put all these elements so beautifully in place, she essentially leaves them there. In theory, this lack of momentum is entirely appropriate for characters feeling badly stuck. In practice, the second half of the novel often seems to be treading water - especially as more and more details pile up about dairy farming and the life-cycle of the local kookaburras.

Tiffany writes so well that Mateship With Birds always remains a good read, particularly for lovers of nature. Nonetheless, you can’t help thinking that with a bit more editing, and a bit more urgency, it could have been a great one.

 
The narrative is fragmentary, flitting not just between scenes, memories and dreams, but between a number of texts – Harry's notebooks, Betty's records of the illnesses of her children, Michael and Hazel, and Hazel's lovely and unsentimental nature diary. When Tiffany writes about the ways in which humans and animals can regard and understand one another, she is tender and wry. This does not change when she evokes the loving awkwardness between the improvised human family at the heart of her story: Harry and Betty, the neighbours who long for one another in a matter-of-fact way, and Betty's children, who have never known their fathers and have come to see Harry in that role...This novel is at once quietly beautiful and briskly sensual, and for her characters – whether human or otherwise – there need be no division between those two.
 
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Birregurra, 1949: a boy of thirteen dies of tetanus after being pecked severely on the head by a magpie.
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On the outskirts of an Australian country town in the 1950s, a lonely farmer trains his binoculars on a family of kookaburras that roost in a tree near his house. Harry observes the kookaburras through a year of feast, famine, birth, death, war, romance and song. As Harry watches the birds, his next door neighbour has her own set of binoculars trained on him. Ardent, hard-working Betty has escaped to the country with her two fatherless children. Betty is pleased that her son, Michael, wants to spend time with the gentle farmer next door. But when Harry decides to teach Michael about the opposite sex, perilous boundaries are crossed.

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