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Sparrow Envy: Field Guide to Birds and Lesser Beasts

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"You are a rare bird, easy to see but invisible just the same." That thought is close at hand in Sparrow Envy: Field Guide to Birds and Lesser Beasts, as renowned naturalist and writer J. Drew Lanham explores his obsession with birds and all things wild in a mixture of poetry and prose. He questions vital assumptions taken for granted by so many birdwatchers: can birding be an escape if the birder is not in a safe place? Who is watching him as he watches birds?

With a refreshing balance of reverence and candor, Lanham paints a unique portrait of the natural world: listening to cicadas, tracking sandpipers, towhees, wrens, and cataloging fellow birdwatchers at a conference where he is one of two black birders. The resulting insights are as honest as they are illuminating.

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    • Booklist

      March 1, 2021
      Lanham, a birder, wildlife ecology professor, writer, and poet, improvises on the practice and language of bird watching in this provocative collection. As he considers nature's intricacy, beauty, and mystery and humankind's ironies, tragedies, and joys, his poems shimmer with precise observations conveyed in a walking-in-the-woods cadence energized by alliteration and near and internal rhymes. Here, too, are incisive prose pieces titled "Field Mark," as in a characteristic trait used to identify species. For Lanham, birding requires empathy: ""Be the bird."" And how he envies sparrows and all wild things for their freedom. As a Black man, Lanham the watcher is all-too often watched and imperiled, as he explains with sharp-beaked, drilling candor in "Nine Rules for the Black Birder." He offers a ""Lifeless List,"" a tally of racial violence and destruction, instead of a typical birder's life list. A self-appointed "taxonomic committee of one," he offers alternatives for bird names commemorating "white-supremacist men" and suggests new collective terms, including "A Mattering of Black birds." Lanham laments humankind's pillaging of the land, calling for us to be more attentive. "See the miracle" in every bird, in every living thing, and cherish it. "That intense care and love is called conservation." An astute, awakening, witty, and resonant work of dissent and a profound embrace of life.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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