| 
| Author: Jonathan Rosen Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Category: Book
List Price: $24.00 Buy New: $13.41 You Save: $10.59 (44%)
New (33) Used (13) from $9.25
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 17465
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.6 x 1.3
ISBN: 0374186308 Dewey Decimal Number: 598.0723473 EAN: 9780374186302 ASIN: 0374186308
Publication Date: February 19, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Absolutely Brand New & In Stock. 100% 30-Day Money Back. Direct from our warehouse. Ships by USPS. 1+ million customers served-In business since 1986. Happy Customers is Our #1 Goal. Toll Free Support
|
| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 6-7 of 7 | | « PREV | | |
A book for everyone March 5, 2008 15 out of 19 found this review helpful
"A Life of the Skies" is a beautifully written account of birding, but it's actually about so much more. It's really about being human, and the way we relate to the natural world, how we effect the natural world even as we observe it. I am not a birder myself, but I was captivated by this book from the first page. Jonathan Rosen is a very compelling writer, and this is a perfect book for someone who wants to understand the relationship between modern life and the natural world.
The soul of birding February 29, 2008 20 out of 22 found this review helpful
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reports that almost 50 million Americans are bird watchers. We come in all flavors: dudes, ringers, ornithologists, twitchers, feeder keepers. Jonathan Rosen's book tells the story of his becoming a hard-core bird-watcher. Part of his story is funny, seeking nature in the midst of Manhattan. Part of it is much deeper: science and art, faith and metaphysics, and the purely biological nature of birds.
"The urge to watch birds is all but instinctive, dating, no doubt, from a time when knowing the natural world -- what could be eaten and what could eat us, what would heal us and what would bring death -- was essential. It is fed by our urge to know, as strong as our urge to eat. Could you imagine a lion stalking prey not out of hunger but out of curiosity? We name things, we classify them. In the Bible Adam gives names to the natural world, imposing a human order on a chaos of life, a kind of second creation.
"Birdwatching is as human an activity as there can be. We have one foot in the animal kingdom -- where, biologically, we belong -- but one foot in a kingdom of our own devising. As Walt Whitman said of himself, we are 'both in and out of the game / and watching and wondering at it.'"
His reference to Whitman exemplifies how he continually blurs scientific and literary insights. For example, "Poetry, it should be said, can be bad for the environment." He tells the true story of an avid collector who released 60 starlings in a garden in Central Park devoted to the flora and fauna mentioned in Shakespeare. Today, there are an estimated 200 million starlings in the United States. Since they will eat anything, they are unreliably useful for controlling insects, but are are normally considered loud, obnoxious and destructive birds, who steal grain, ravage crops and crowd out native bird species. He adds poetry of his own: "Birds say life life life, but something right alongside them is always whispering death death death," "Birds say life life life, but something right alongside them is always whispering death death death."
Rosen is the author of Talmud and the Internet, in which he argues that the Talmud and the Internet are two great efforts to collect all of the the knowledge in the world. His religious beliefs inform much of his writing in this book. "Birds raise complex questions about belonging, much like Jews. ... We all have to figure out where we belong geographically, but also metaphysically. ... Personally I believe that there is a divine spark in us which binds us to the rest of creation, not merely as fellow creatures, but as caretakers, with an earthly responsibility like the one we imagined for God."
You don't have to be religious to enjoy this book and to learn something important about your love of watching birds. He reflects on Audubon, Thoreau, Roosevelt, Wallace, Whitman, Emily Dickinson, and Robert Frost; on ivory bill woodpeckers and birds of paradise, on hunting, falconry, writing, religion and doubt. "While you're civilizing them, they're decivilizing you. By studying birds, you're bringing them into your literary world, but they're bringing you into their natural world."
I moved between the natural and the literary worlds, and thoroughly enjoyed the transitions.
Robert C. Ross 2008
|
|
|