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3+ verk 1,011 medlemmar 41 recensioner

Om författaren

Inkluderar namnet: Dan Koeppel

Verk av Dan Koeppel

Associerade verk

The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2011 (2011) — Bidragsgivare — 287 exemplar

Taggad

Allmänna fakta

Födelsedag
1962
Kön
male
Nationalitet
USA
Yrken
columnist
media commentator

Medlemmar

Recensioner

Great book. There was the scientific, evolutionary aspect of the banana and then the socio- political one. All are related in say to understand terms and the whole reads like a novel. A story well told. Hope some political decision makers read it
 
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cspiwak | 26 andra recensioner | Mar 6, 2024 |
Interesting reading. However, the book has many faults. First, it's too long. How many times does the author have to repeat the same facts? And the history is confusing as the author bounces back and forth from country to county and year to year. The author also leaves the reader clueless as to many questions. What's the likelihood that the banana (as we know it) will disappear, change, etc. He just presents all the options as possibilities and we are left trying to puzzle out the likelihoods ourselves.… (mer)
 
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donwon | 26 andra recensioner | Jan 22, 2024 |
The other day, I was having my weekly coffee with friends when one of them said to me, (in relation to a FB post of mine she’d recently seen): “You’ve become a real Twitcher, haven’t you?”

I hadn’t started this book yet, but my answer was a resounding “no” for several reasons, though it was hard to really define them for her. Now that I have finished this book, it’s much easier, and I’ll get back to that at the end of my post.

To See Every Bird on Earth is meant to be, if you believe what it says on the wrapper, a book that explores the thrill of the chase across the world to witness as many of the earth’s birds as possible in a lifetime. There’s some of that, but mostly, it’s the culmination of what I’m guessing was a lot of therapy for the author; a psychological catharsis of his family’s dysfunction, written and published. In many ways, this book was marketed to the wrong demographic; those that find personal substance in others’ stories about personal journeys would find a lot to like in this book. Needless to say, it’s not my jam.

BUT having said that, in between the family drama being laid bare, there was a lot of interesting insight into the world of Big Listers. Big Listers are those that have seen thousands of the known species of birds in the world. Known species is a moving target, and is currently around 10 thousand. The biggest Big Lister has seen over 8 thousand. This is about big numbers, big money, and big obsessions – and very little about the birds. Koeppel, when he focuses on these people, does a better than credible job getting into their heads and their world and it was fascinating for me, in a rubber-necking kind of way. The chance to see the birds these people have seen is tantalising; how they go about it, like a military invasion, isn’t.

And ultimately, this is why I’m not a twitcher, neither of the hobby sized or obsessive Big Lister variety. True, I have the list of birds in my state, and I do check them off when I see them, noting the time and place. But I don’t count, I don’t plan, set goals, or study, and I’m embarrassed at how few bird songs I can identify after the 10 years I’ve spent tramping around the bush – and at how easily I can confuse myself over identifications.

But I have no desire to ‘do better’ because my hazy goal, set when I started this and unchanged since, isn’t to just see the birds. When I moved to Australia, not knowing how long I’d be here, I wanted to see Australia, I wanted to experience this place so far away from the rest of the world on so many levels. Looking for birds (which are, let’s be honest, the low-hanging fruit of the wildlife tree), makes me look up, down, and into the bush; I have to actually explore my surroundings, and in doing that I come much closer to actually experiencing this amazing land. The added bonus: not only have I seen (and am seeing) Australia in a way that will stay with me, but I have a new found sense of wonder wherever I go, including home to Florida. I apparently lived 90% of my life alongside hundreds of bird species I never knew about because I never paid attention. And by looking for the birds, I’m finding an entire world of wildlife right there for me to appreciate (or not, in the case of some).

So while I didn’t enjoy To See Every Bird on Earth as much as I’d hoped, I do thank its author for helping me clarify in my own mind my motivations for my avian hobby that definitely isn’t bird-watching.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
murderbydeath | 13 andra recensioner | Jan 29, 2022 |
Dan Koeppel's father's obsession with birds began at age 12. He wanted to be an ornithologist, but because of pressure from his parents, went to medical school and became a doctor. He married, had two kids, and divorced. After the divorce, he arranged his life to accommodate the bird-watching habit he had never given up. He worked as an ER doctor, allowing him to accumulate funds, and then take off on long birdwatching trips to exotic locations around the world. He belonged to that elite group of birdwatchers known as "big listers." It is estimated that there are around 9,600 distinct species of bird in the world (only about 900 in the US and Canada), and to see more than 7000 is a huge accomplishment.

This book brings us right into the world of these big listers--the lengths they go to and the money they spend to "see every bird." But it is also a son's memoir of coming to terms with his estranged father, as in later life he joined his father on several bird watching trips and struggled to understand his father's obsession.

Recommended

3 1/2 stars
… (mer)
½
 
Flaggad
arubabookwoman | 13 andra recensioner | Oct 27, 2021 |

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Statistik

Verk
3
Även av
1
Medlemmar
1,011
Betyg
3.8
Recensioner
41
ISBN
22

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