cayleejanet's review against another edition

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i’ll come back to it, his writing is just so like dense it isnt easy to read i just need to read things i love right now 

em1lyrutherford's review against another edition

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3.0

DNF’d at 150 pages - did enjoy it and of course I want to come back but not right now.

jchavez's review against another edition

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adventurous hopeful informative reflective medium-paced

4.5

spencerseas's review against another edition

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3.0

Draws the right conclusions but is full of moralistic judgements of birds and scientists; a lot of unnecessary prose illustrating the author’s feelings rather than imparting information or adding to the narrative arc.

clivemeister's review

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5.0

I found this to be a deeply researched, thoughtful, beautiful insight into the lived experience and ecosystems of ten different species of seabirds. And simultaneously, a heart-wrenching, terrifying, glimpse into the impact of the human world on their breeding and feeding grounds, their populations and their individual lives.

Early on, Adam Nicolson introduces the concept of "umwelt", created by Joakob von Uexkull after reading Kant and his idea that our minds shape the world we perceive:
The German means 'surrounding world', but more largely, as primatologist Frans de Waal has described it, Uexkull had in mind a vision of the animal's 'self-centred subjective world, which represents only a small tranche of all available worlds'. Each species lives in its own unique sensory universe, to which we may be partially or wholly blind, and so we must not speak of animal 'cognition' or animal 'intelligence', but in the plural of 'cognitions' and 'intelligences'. Each animal's 'meaning-world' cannot be understood on any terms except its own.


This concept of umwelt drives the rest of the book. In ten chapters, Nicolson tries to show us the meaning-world of birds from Fulmars to Gannets and Albatrosses. It's a lovely book, with an important message. Quite how we individually can help with these large-scale coordination problems is a challenge that besets the modern age, as we drive in our ton-and-a-half of steel's worth of cars, burning irreplaceable fuels, to trendy cafes where we sip eco-friendly lattes (made with almond milk - using ten times the water of dairy milk to farm, and rare breed coffee, farmed on the former habitat of we care not what animals), congratulating ourselves that we no longer use a plastic straw to sip through. Whatever we are doing, it's clear it's too little, and may well be too late.

jennabunny's review against another edition

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informative reflective slow-paced

5.0

annagrac's review

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5.0

I loved this book. It provides genuine insight into challenges and family lives of these birds that are at the same time familiar to us as humans and yet very alien. I came away with a new appreciation for the struggles these birds go through and extreme gratitude that I was not born a Nazca Booby [spoiler alert: a daft name is the least of these bird's worries].

patsaintsfan's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5 stars.

carlyalynnsia's review against another edition

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adventurous informative sad slow-paced

4.75

sharon_geitz's review against another edition

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4.0

An eloquent tribute to the roving souls of sea birds.