Small-headed Flycatcher. Seen Yesterday. He Didn’t Leave His Name.
and other stories
Pete Dunne author Louise Zemaitis illustrator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Texas Press
Published:1st Sep '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Brings together thirty-two vintage Dunne essays
In thirty-two vintage essays, Pete Dunne explores the worlds of birds and birders.
Pete Dunne has been watching birds since he was seven years old. But not just watching-deeply absorbing every nuance of color, markings, shape, flight, and song; all the subtle clues that can identify a bird barely glimpsed among the highest branches in fading twilight. With the same skill, he has been observing and writing about birding and birders for over twenty years, using humor, sentiment, occasional sarcasm, and unashamed passion for his chosen profession to explore why birdwatching is so irresistibly compelling to so many people.
This book brings together thirty-two vintage essays that Dunne originally wrote for publications such as American Birds, Bird Watcher's Digest, Birder's World, Birding, Living Bird, the New Jersey edition of the Sunday New York Times, WildBird, and Wild Bird News. Encounters with birds rare and common is their shared theme, through which Dunne weaves stories of his family and friends, reflections on the cycles of nature, and portraits of unforgettable birders whose paths have crossed his, ranging from Roger Tory Peterson to a life-battered friend who finds solace in birding. A cliff-hanger story of the bird that got away gives this book its title.
Mr. Dunne . . . is one of the country's most-respected birders, a self-taught authority whose exuberant, almost-poetic approach to the pastime has won him many followers among the growing legions of birders. * Wall Street Journal *
ISBN: 9780292716001
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
156 pages