Currently Reading

ConversazioniBirds, Birding & Books

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Currently Reading

1perennialreader
Set 14, 2019, 9:29 am

The Thing with Feathers: The Surprising Lives of Birds and What They Reveal About Being Human by Noah Strycker

Strycker is a writer, photographer, and bird man based near Eugene, Oregon. In 2015, during a quest spanning 41 countries and all seven continents, he set a world record by seeing 6,042 species of birds – more than half the birds on Earth – in one calendar year. He is Associate Editor of Birding magazine.

3frahealee
Modificato: Feb 18, 2020, 10:55 am

I realize that this is a stretch, but fictional birds are of as much interest to me as those on my realistic radar. =) Bingeing on Gothic Literature currently, mixed with The Weird Tradition group offerings, brought The King in Yellow into view. One of those ten short stories by Robert William Chambers had so much description about the birds and butterflies and fish that in researching his origin, I discovered that not only was he big on environmental causes but also an avid birder!

Recently, several authors have crossed my path, specifically for their interest in our wild and free feathered friends, ie. Margaret Atwood and the late Graeme Gibson, who owned a rental cottage on Pelee Island. I've been to Point Pelee National Park many times, and to the island once by 90min ferry, and the birds are numerous and seem happy with their safe haven.

I will need to go back to my gothic thread to hunt down the specific story title...

4frahealee
Modificato: Feb 18, 2020, 10:55 am

>3 frahealee: It was called The Street of Our Lady of the Fields.

5frahealee
Modificato: Feb 18, 2020, 10:55 am

Having dusted off three books that I just listed in the children's bird book thread, I'm going to attempt to read them cover to cover over the approaching spring/summer months. I've only ever dipped in and out of bird books, looking up this or that, but maybe it's time to deepen the experience. They will be;

Finding Your Wings

Eastern Birds: An Audubon Handbook

Sibley's Birding Basics

6perennialreader
Feb 22, 2020, 1:27 pm

Just finished The Peregrine by J.A. Baker. Intense recording of tracking peregrine falcons for ten years. Condensed into a short account. I found it interesting. Since the book takes place in England, I have many bird names to look up because there are many I am not familiar with.

7perennialreader
Feb 8, 2021, 12:01 pm

Just got a new book. So far great pictures! Looking forward to reading it. Birds of Prey by Pete Dunne

8Tess_W
Feb 18, 2021, 5:35 am

For the past year, I've been trying to read Song and Garden Birds of North America, a lovely, illustrated, 2 volume work by Alexander Wetmore. I'm trying to read 5 pages per week. I also have The Penguin Lessons: What I Learned from a Remarkable Bird and Owls of the Eastern Ice: A Quest to Find and Save the World's Largest Owl that I would like to get to this year.

9Tess_W
Mar 4, 2021, 12:18 am

>7 perennialreader: That comes highly recommended.

10Tess_W
Modificato: Ott 10, 2021, 11:54 pm

Finished Owls of the Eastern Ice by Jonathan C. Slaght. It was a non-fiction read in which the author recounts his quest to identify, tag, and create a conservation program for Frog Owls, the largest species of owls. These owls reside mostly in northeast Russia, Japan, and Korea. This PhD. research project was not without its problems, primarily being that the tagging transmitters did not work in spite of having a high price tag. This was a very interesting look at how one scientist tried to stave off the extinction of this owl, which is on the endangered list. 370 pages 5 stars

11NorthernStar
Nov 2, 2021, 1:59 am

I'm presently reading Flying Dinosaurs and enjoying it a lot. I would recommend it to anyone interested in birds, dinosaurs, or evolution.

12Tess_W
Modificato: Nov 16, 2021, 5:51 am

I purchased this book for $1 at a thrift store--looks like it has never been read! From the cover I learned that cuckoos are nest parasitical. Probably won't get read right away, but is on the top of Mount TBR.

13alisondl
Feb 22, 9:30 pm

After spotting bluebirds in a nearby tree, I was introduced to a network of neighbors who put up bluebird houses and monitor them in an effort to protect nests from house sparrow predators. The neighborhoods preeminent “bluebird lady” loaned me the 1990 memoir “Beakless Bluebirds and Featherless Penguins” written by Sister Barbara Ann, a nun who rescued and adopted two bluebird babies that survived an attack on their nest. It is wonderful! A good story, a lovely nature journal including the author’s sketches, and I am learning a lot.