I am not really a bird watcher, but we have feeders out and I enjoy trying to identify the more distinctive birds who come to our feeders (not so much all the different kinds of little brown birds). I heard about this book from a radio interview a year or so ago, and it has taken this long for it to percolate up to the top of my pile.
In the interview, Amy Tan mentioned that she had started watching birds more avidly after she developed a condition that didn’t allow her to drive safely or be out alone. She doesn’t mention this in the book, just says she doesn’t drive, but talks about her childhood fascination with bugs and other things she found along a creek that somehow kept her looking down instead of up.
However, she began to observe birds seriously in 2017 and also returned to drawing. She had lots of questions about birds and felt she could answer some of them by drawing them accurately.
The result is a bird journal that she kept until 2022, when she decided to start a new journal that looked up even more, out of her own backyard and into the wooded places beyond. The journal is full of drawings, one for each journal entry, starting out fairly rudimentary (although better than I can draw) and getting more complex. Some of the entries are lighthearted, the drawings accurate but with quirky captions or imaginings of what the birds are saying or thinking. Although most of the drawings are black and white, there are two sections of colored illustrations, and other colored drawings pop up all over the journal.
Tan is a wonderer, and she has questions about a lot of things—what does it mean when a bird does this? can birds play? (I think she proves that they can) how much of their behavior is instinct and how much learning or even thinking?
One of the stories Tan told on the radio that had me hooked is how she got a hummingbird to eat out of a small feeder right in her hand. That entry is the first one in the book. How cool is that?
Although it’s more full of questions than answers, this book is a good one for anyone who is even vaguely interested in birds, like I am.
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