cover image Bald Coot and Screaming Loon: Adventures in the Curious Mysterious and Remarkable World of Birds

Bald Coot and Screaming Loon: Adventures in the Curious Mysterious and Remarkable World of Birds

Niall Edworthy, Perigree, $17.95 (208p) ISBN 9780399535680

After an abortive encounter with birds during Spring break, a teenaged Edworthy gave up his dream of nature photography for writing; with a number books under his belt (The Curious Gardener's Almanac, The Optimist's/Pessimist's Handbook), he returns to his early passion for "the magical enigma" of birds with a guidebook aimed at general readers, rather than committed bird-watchers. Full of fascinating information and trivia presented in a well-illustrated, magazine-like layout, Edworthy's volume discusses topics like the probability that birds and reptiles share a common, 145-million-year-old ancestor, the crow-sized "Archaeopterix," and the myth that birds are largely monogamous (although swans, albatrosses and most birds of prey "do settle down for life"). Surprisingly, he overlooks some recent research—like a 2007 study contradicting his assertion that, in most instances, only male birds sing—but is largely reliable in his discussion of bird behavior, providing colorful anecdotes for characteristics like problem solving in crows: "in Japanese cities [crows] drop walnuts in front of cars … and wait for an obliging wheel to break the shell open." (Apr.)