Blog Tour Review: Why Do Birds Suddenly Disappear? by Lev Parikian

Lev Parikian was a keen birdwatcher when he was 11, but as an adult he barely remembered most of what he used to know about birds. He’d confidently declare that he’d seen a nightingale and then be too embarrassed to later admit it was actually a skylark. Also, he had to acknowledge that he hadn’t been completely honest as a preteen birder: No way had he seen a black redstart, for instance. Probably about 30% of his childhood sightings could be dismissed as cheats or downright lies. As the birdwatching bug bit again at the start of 2016, he decided it was time to set the record straight. His aim? To see 200 birds in a year, with no twitching (driving many miles to see a reported rarity) and no cheating.

Most of the book is a chronological tour through 2016, with each month’s new sightings totaled up at the end of the chapter. Being based in London isn’t the handicap one might expect – there’s a huge population of parakeets there nowadays, and the London Wetland Centre in Barnes is great for water birds – but Parikian also fills in his list through various trips around the country. He picks up red kites while in Windsor for a family wedding, and his list balloons in April thanks to trips to Minsmere and Rainham Marshes, where he finds additions like bittern and marsh harrier. The Isle of Wight, Scotland, Lindsifarne, North Norfolk… The months pass and the numbers mount until it’s the middle of December and his total is hovering at 196. Will he make it? I wouldn’t dare spoil the result for you!

I’ve always enjoyed ‘year-challenge’ books, everything from Julie Powell’s Julie and Julia to Nina Sankovitch’s Tolstoy and the Purple Chair, so I liked this memoir’s air of self-imposed competition, and its sense of humor. Having accompanied my husband on plenty of birdwatching trips, I could relate to the alternating feelings of elation and frustration. I also enjoyed the mentions of Parikian’s family history and career as a freelance conductor – I’d like to read more about this in his first book, Waving, Not Drowning (2013). This is one for fans of Alexandra Heminsley’s Leap In and Kyo Maclear’s Birds Art Life, or for anyone who needs reassurance that it’s never too late to pick up a new skill or return to a beloved hobby.

Lastly, I must mention what a beautiful physical object this book is. The good folk of Unbound have done it again. The cover image and endpapers reproduce Alan Harris’s lovely sketch of a gradually disappearing goldcrest, and if you lift the dustjacket you’re rewarded with the sight of some cheeky bird footprints traipsing across the cover.

Some favorite passages:

“Birders love a list. Day lists, week lists, month lists, year lists, life lists, garden lists, county lists, walk-to-work lists, seen-from-the-train lists, glimpsed-out-of-the-bathroom-window-while-doing-a-poo lists.”

“It’s one thing sitting in your favourite armchair, musing on the plumage differences between first- and second-winter black-headed gulls, but that doesn’t help identify the scrubby little blighter that’s just jigged into that bush, never to be seen again. And it’s no use asking them politely to damn well sit still blast you while I jot down the distinguishing features of your plumage in this notebook dammit which pocket is it in now where did I put the pencil ah here it is oh bugger it’s gone. They just won’t. Most disobliging.”

“There is a word in Swedish, gökotta, for the act of getting up early to listen to birdsong, but the knowledge that this word exists, while heartwarming, doesn’t make it any easier. It’s a bitter pill, this early rising, but my enthusiasm propels me to acts of previously unimagined heroism, and I set the alarm for an optimistic 5 a.m., before reality prompts me to change it to 5.15, no 5.30, OK then 5.45.”

My rating:


Why Do Birds Suddenly Disappear? was published by Unbound on May 17th. My thanks to the publisher for the free copy for review.

 

I was delighted to be invited to participate in the blog tour for Why Do Birds Suddenly Disappear? See below for details of where other reviews and features have appeared or will be appearing soon (including on my hubby’s blog on Thursday!).

22 responses

  1. I already have this one on my list thanks to Paula’s review over at Book Jotter but had I needed any more pursuasion your post has succeeded. I sent this link to Paula but you might like to take a look too. It’s to the webcam for our local peregrine falcon chicks: http://upp.hawkandowl.org/bath-peregrines/bath-st-johns-church-peregrine-live-web-cam-2018/ Not for the faint-hearted as pigeon remains feature!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Wow, how neat to have a nest locally! We apparently have one at the top of an office building here in Newbury, but I’ve never seen the falcons. My husband has, I think.

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      1. I think there are a fair number nesting in tall buildings throughout the UK. This family made their debut on Springwatch several generations back. The webcam is mildly addictive!

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Our local raptor here in Maryland (U.S.) is the osprey. It’s fun to keep an eye on their nests–and their loud calls make them easy to spot. Sounds like a delightful book–great post, thanks!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. We get ospreys over here too. Always great to see them on either continent. Some nest just a 10-minute drive down the road from my parents’ place in Maryland. I couldn’t believe that high-pitched call came from them the first time I heard it.

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  3. The quotes you include prompt me to feel this would be a very good read for someone who’s just Not Very Good at birdwatching. Like me.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Ha! Yes, it could make a good pairing with those ‘How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher’ books.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. This one is firmly on the list. With you and Paula at the Book Jotter on the tour, how could it not be! It helps that I love birds, lists and reading about other people’s challenges!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I’m pleased you’re interested 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  5. So that’s three people I follow who are on this blog tour – I think that’s telling me something. My husband’s keen on it, too, although I have noted there’s a theme about the author’s dad that might be difficult. Thanks for helping convince me on this one!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. The mentions of his late father are few and far between.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. What beautiful presentation indeed. Admittedly the subject was kinda interesting, and the quotes piqued my interest more determinedly, but the photos did it!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Unbound are doing really impressive work!

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      1. Just to manage expectations I should clarify that the edition provided for reviewers and subscribers (who made the book exist in the first place) is different from the ‘trade’ edition, which is still a handsome item, but lacks the bronze embossing, the bird tracks on the front cover, and the illustrated endpapers. I wouldn’t want people to be disappointed!

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  7. This sounds like an entertaining book, even if you’re not a birdwatcher.
    I go back and forth on whether or not I think I’d like to bird watch. I love seeing birds while going for my walks, but I think I’d find it frustrating to feel like I needed to see them more clearly to determine what exactly they are. Some are obvious, but so many of them look the same!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I feel the same way. I’ve absorbed a decent knowledge of English birds from going on trips with my husband, but I’m still clueless about the different kinds of gulls, or even certain ducks. You’d have to carry binoculars around if you really wanted to learn. I think you’d enjoy Kyo Maclear’s Birds Art Life, too.

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      1. I have that one!

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    2. I thought you might 😉

      Liked by 1 person

  8. […] Paul, Paula, Rebecca, Matt, Alice, Tiffany,  Chris, Natalie, John: thank you for your kind words. And Shona, […]

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  9. […] was on the blog tour for Parikian’s previous book, Why Do Birds Suddenly Disappear?, in 2018. While the books are alike in levity (pun intended!), being full of self-deprecation and […]

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  10. […] was only 2018 that I read Why Do Birds Suddenly Disappear? but since then we’ve had another three books from Lev Parikian. It’s now hard to imagine a year […]

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