"[Dunne's] collection of essays is a wonderful bedside book for birders, nature lovers, and anyone who enjoys elegant, evocative and piercingly honest writing." New Scientist, 8 March 2003

Dubbed the "Bard of America's Bird-Watchers" by the Wall Street Journal, Pete Dunne knows birders and birding-instinctively and completely. He understands the compulsion that drives other birders to go out at first light, whatever the weather, for a chance to maybe, just maybe, glimpse that rare migrant that someone might have spotted in a patch of woods the day before yesterday. And yet, he also knows how . . . well . . . strange the birding obsession becomes when viewed through the eyes of a nonbirder. His dual perspective-totally engrossed in birding, yet still aware of the "odd birdness" of some birders-makes reading his essays a pure pleasure whether you pursue "the feather quest" or not.

This book collects forty-one of Dunne's recent essays, drawn from his columns in Living Bird, Wild Bird News, the New Jersey Sunday section of the New York Times, Birder's World, and other publications. Written with his signature wit and insight, they cover everything from a moment of awed communion with a Wandering Albatross ("the most beautiful thing I'd ever seen") to Dunne's imagined "perfect bird" ("The Perfect Bird is the size of a turkey, has the wingspan of an eagle, the legs of a crane, the feet of a moorhen, and the talons of a great horned owl. It eats kudzu, surplus zucchini, feral cats, and has been known to predate upon homeowners who fire up their lawn mowers before 7:00 A.M. on the weekend."). The title essay pays whimsical, yet heartfelt tribute to Dunne's mentor, the late birding legend Roger Tory Peterson.

Les mer
A collection of forty-one of author's essays that cover what from a moment of awed communion with a Wandering Albatross to his imagined 'perfect bird' ('The Perfect Bird is the size of a turkey, has the wingspan of an eagle, the legs of a crane, the feet of a moorhen, and the talons of a great horned owl. It eats kudzu, and surplus zucchini).
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  • Acknowledgments
  • Preface
  • Eye of the Beheld
  • All You Need Is $
  • Directions, Please!
  • Listening with Longing, Settling for Beauty
  • Birding Tough
  • Words to Lead By
  • The Best Yard in the Neighborhood
  • Crusader's Banner
  • Donna and the Right Stuff
  • Of Kids and Model Airplanes
  • Going to the Bird Store. Hoping for a Guide
  • The Take-Home of Going Away
  • Want to Go for a Walk?
  • Birding in Shadowland
  • Stuff E'nuf?
  • A Six-Pack of Fame
  • Explorers (of the Lost World) Club
  • Earl's Journal
  • A Flicker Day for Sure
  • The Errors We're Known By
  • Talkin' around a Sighting
  • Truth and Consequences
  • Something Stringy about This
  • Binocular Reality
  • Circus genitalia
  • Almost Ivory
  • Hearing
  • New Eyes
  • Intimate
  • Birding Products for the Twenty-first Century
  • Peenter Pan
  • The Trust of Jay
  • Ghost Writing
  • Golden Wings
  • Meet the New Age. . .
  • Birdin' in the Rain
  • A Life without Birding?
  • Understanding Wren
  • A Chat about the Rules
  • Passing the Pen
  • The Perfect Bird
Les mer
This book collects forty-one of Dunne's recent essays

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780292716230
Publisert
2003-03-01
Utgiver
University of Texas Press
Vekt
454 gr
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
140 mm
Aldersnivå
01, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
136

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Pete Dunne is Director of the New Jersey Audubon Society's Cape May Bird Observatory in Cape May Point, New Jersey, and a consultant to the Peterson birding field guide series.