WHO KNEW?

My most recent book purchase arrived on my doorstep today, and I immediately went into a flurry of browsing.  It’s wonderful!

This is Sibley’s most recent book, published in April, 2020. When I sought it out on Amazon, it was already back ordered!  Not being particularly patient, I ordered it on Kindle and started reading immediately. 

N.B. It’s better  as a physical book. For one thing, the illustrations are dazzling, and that comes across much better in hardcover. Sibley does his own paintings.

I recently learned that what I’d been calling a purple finch is actually a house finch, so went immediately to the finch section. There I learned that all red, orange, and yellow colors in songbirds come from the carotenoids in their diet, and therefore, the brighter the colors the healthier the bird.  What It’s Like to be a Bird  isn’t meant to be read straight through, cover to cover. And I, for one find it easier to flip back and forth in a physical book

Sibley is well known for his books on birds. His various guides are “must haves” for bird identification. These guides are organized, as most field guides seem to be, for the purpose of identification.  This isn’t my kind of nature book.

Which raises the question, “What is my kind of nature book?”  I easily plucked more than two dozen books off my shelves that, by my classification, are nature books. Here are a few of my favorites.

I acquired this book years ago solely because it was written by a colleague at St. Lawrence University. It is delightful! Robert DeGraaff styled The Book of the Toad as “A Natural and Magical History of Toad-Human Relations.” It’s an engaging mix of toad lore, symbolism, biology, use as hallucinogens, etc. The toad’s role in everything from art to witchcraft is in this book.

I have a similar book about rats. The Rat: A Perverse Miscellany is filled with fascinating (to me) tidbits about rats, including how they live and are treated around the world. You’ll find rats everywhere, in fables, literature gothic and modern, and in film. Of course, Barbara Hodgson included the role they played in plagues.

Having farms in my background perhaps explains why I picked up The Complete Chicken on a bargain shelf once upon a time. As a child, I was afraid to gather eggs for fear the hens would peck me. To this day, I can still “smell” the acrid unpleasantnesses of chicken droppings and the wet feathers of chickens killed for the table being scalded for plucking. But Pam Percy‘s book gave me a whole new appreciation for chickens rooting in trees, the best breeds for eating and laying, and the all-around appeal of buff orpingtons. If you tend to think a chicken is a chicken, browse the breeds around the world, from Australia to Zimbabwe.

Crows fascinate me. They’re smart. They learn from the older generation about which places/people/sites to avoid without ever experiencing them directly. They communicate. They avoid places where a crow has died. And they’ve adapted beautifully to urban living! Candace Savage, among her many other non-fiction works, wrote Crows: Encounters of the Wise Guys of the Avian World.

Given the current concern over the future of honeybees, and thus the world, you might want to pick up a copy of The Queen Must Die (not the young adult historical fantasy novel, though that also looks pretty interesting).  My copy of the book was discarded at some point by the Fond Du Lac Public Library in Wisconsin, and I have no idea how it came to be on my shelf.

According to author William Longgood, “Bees are more than a hobby; they are a life study, in many respects a mirror of our own society.” Longwood presents the life of bees as a “work or die” society, with only collective wealth (honey), each bee so dependent upon the whole that an isolated bee, even with the right food and temperature, will soon die. Lots of interesting (to me) bits of info, such as one hive filled with honey can weigh 80 pounds. Bees were studied and written about by the ancient Greeks.  A queen can lay as many a 2,000 eggs a day. And then she dies.

Perhaps you’ve noticed that the above books all deal with animals, and I guess that is a recurring choice—perhaps because they are animate, and thus more likely to have personalities.

But I’ve recently spent more time on flowers and plants than before, and I find there’s more to them than their looks and uses. One of my favorite finds was Who Named the the Daisy? Who Named the Rose? A Roving History of North American Wildflowers.

Here’s a quote from Mary DurantLUPINE, by its own choice, thrives on poor oil. But in ancient days the concept of cause and effect were reversed, and it was believed that lupine destroyed the soil, that it wolfed the nourishment out of the earth. Thus it was named after the wolf—lupus, in Latin. 

I’m now more interested in knowing what I am seeing. There are at least two free plant identification apps available for smart phones, as well as several subscription services for sale. I’m much more likely to snap a picture and find out immediately what I’ve seen than try to remember the details necessary to look it up in a guide.

Mary Roach, though she claims to “fake her way through interviews with experts she doesn’t understand,” manages to write fascinating non-fiction books a wide variety of subjects. The titles say all that is necessary about why virtually anyone would find these books entertaining as well as informative.

Then, too, I have books on earthly things, dangerous things, and invisible things. But this has gone on long enough. Suffice it to say, whatever aspect of nature catches your interest, there’s a book on that!

Before I wrote this blog, I’d never have characterized myself as a nature buff. But now?

Our 2019 Beach Reads

illustration of Harry Potter carrying books "Change the beach one book at a time"

I wrote about beach reads in 2016 and 2018—years when I actually spent a week at the beach.

So what happened in 2017? I was in the Rockies for a week! And somehow, writing about mountain reads just didn’t come to mind. I expect to be in the West again in 2020, and I’ll fix that! In the meantime, this was another beach summer, this time at Bethany Beach, DE.

In case you are interested, the rotation is based on the locations of my daughters—one in Connecticut, one in Massachusetts, and one in Colorado. Traditionally, meeting in the East means the beach somewhere whereas the West has meant mountains. Most of the same people come year after year, all family.

Browseabout Books sign
Browseabout Books

This year’s beach reads

This year we were 14—all family, but all individuals, hence the variety of reads! Here’s what three generations are reading during their week together.

P1: Jan Karon, IN THE COMPANY OF OTHERS; Bob Goff, EVERYBODY, ALWAYS.

P2: David Jeremiah, THE BOOK OF SIGNS; Robert Ludlum, SCORPIO ILLUSION.

P3: Pearl S. Buck, THE GOOD EARTH.

GoodEarthNovel.JPG
The Good Earth (Fair use)

 

P4: Erica Ridley, THE COMPLETE DUKES OF WAR COLLECTION—seven novels and a short story.

P5: Don Miguel Ruiz, THE FOUR AGREEMENTS; Bill P, Todd W, and Sarah S, DROP THE ROCK; Nora Roberts, THE MACKADE BROTHERS; DAILY REFLECTIONS.

P6: Andy Weir, ARTEMIS; Sarah Perry, THE ESSEX SERPENT; George R. R. Martin, A CLASH OF KINGS.

P7: Jonathan Kellerman, KILLER; John Sandford, DARK OF THE MOON; DAILY REFLECTIONS.

P8: Ernest Cline, READY PLAYER ONE.

P9: Angie Thomas, THE HATE U GIVE.

The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas

P10: Jeff Kinney, DIARY OF A WIMPY KID: THE LONG HAUL

P11: Sharon M. Draper, OUT OF MY MIND

P12: Adam Silvera, HISTORY IS ALL YOU LEFT ME; John Green, WILL GRAYSON, WILL GRAYSON.

P13: Andrew J. Mellon, UNSTUFF YOUR LIFE: KICK THE CLUTTER HABIT AND COMPLETELY ORGANIZE YOUR LIFE FOR GOOD

P14: H. W. Brands, THE FIRST AMERICAN: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

 

beach reads sign: "what are you reading this summer? Let us know!"

Where are you traveling this summer, and what are you reading? Let me know in the comments.

Look Backward, Reader

bookshelf books 2016

At this time of year, everyone seems to do “Best of…” lists about everything. So I’ll jump on the bandwagon with great reads from 2016.

On December 8th, NPR’s Fresh Air featured “The 10 Best Books of 2016 faced Tough Topics Head On.” You can hear the segment or get the transcript on the NPR website. But to entice you:

colson whitehead

The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead is THE book of the year. The basic premise is that the Underground Railroad was an actual network of trains running underground in antebellum America.

Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi is a debut novel– not surprisingly, a multi-generational family saga. This book deals with the slave trade among Africans.

Underground Airlines by Ben H. Winters again deals with slavery, but through alternative history and noir suspense.

Here I Am by Jonathan Safran Foer tells of a marriage/family falling apart.

The Wonder by Emma Donoghue is about religious delusion and self-denial, set in Ireland in the 1800s.

The Lonely City: Adventures In The Art Of Being Alone by critic Olivia Laing is nonfiction, on the connection between loneliness and visual art.

Eleanor Roosevelt: The War Years And After, 1939-1962 is the third and final volume of this biography.

Eyes On The Street: The Life Of Jane Jacobs by Robert Kanigel is another excellent biography, this one of a female writer, activist, and “public intellectual.”

born run bruce springsteen

Born To Run by Bruce Springsteen is the tenth book mentioned. It’s a lyrical telling of his roots and his rise to stardom.

I happen to like and trust NPR picks. But these lists are everywhere.

wsj books year

The December 10-11 issue of The Wall Street Journal’s BOOKS OF THE YEAR feature gives you great variety. Your local library probably has it archived, and it’s worth a look. It includes the year’s reading of fifty varied, prominent people.

Meghan Cox Gurdon lists the best children’s books of 2016.

Tom Nolan gives his choices for the best mysteries of the year.

WSJ pictures 20 covers of their books of the year.

wsj books year

And it gives catchy titles to several reviews. The World’s Most Mysterious Book is The Voynich Manuscript, edited by Raymond Clemens. Double Barreled Magic is Morning, Paramus by Derek Walcott and Peter Doug.

Two Ole’s for Spanish Food are Grape, Olive, Pig by Matt Goulding; and Cu’rate by Katie Button.

Of Arms and the Freedom is a review of Thunder at the Gates by Douglas R. Egerton.

The Disease of the Enlightenment is Scurvy by Jonathan Lamb.

The Roads That Led From Rome deals with Ancient Worlds by Michael Scott.

A Death Star Is Born reviews George Lucas by Brian Jay Jones.

The Eagle and the Dragon is the review of The Beautiful Country and the Middle Kingdom by John Pomfret.

baker electrics aristocrats motordom

Last but not least is Everything Old Is New Again, a review of Rethink: The Surprising History of New Ideas by Steven Poole.

There are also lists of books to read when approaching the new Trump presidency, such as Salon’s “Books for the Trump Years” and The New York Times‘ “Books for the Trump Era.”

These are just two of the varied approaches to reading the year gone by. You can get lists from Amazon, Esquire, Barnes & Noble, Bloomberg, Goodreads, and many more.

So, dear readers, look back at 2016 and see what you might have missed.