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Bird Day
A Story of 24 Hours and 24 Avian Lives
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Illustrator:
and
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2023
About this book
An hourly guide that follows twenty-four birds as they find food, mates, and safety from predators.
From morning to night and from the Antarctic to the equator, birds have busy days. In this short book, ornithologist Mark E. Hauber shows readers exactly how birds spend their time. Each chapter covers a single bird during a single hour, highlighting twenty-four different bird species from around the globe, from the tropics through the temperate zones to the polar regions. We encounter owls and nightjars hunting at night and kiwis and petrels finding their way in the dark. As the sun rises, we witness the beautiful songs of the “dawn chorus.” At eleven o’clock in the morning, we float alongside a common pochard, a duck resting with one eye open to avoid predators. At eight that evening, we spot a hawk swallowing bats whole, gorging on up to fifteen in rapid succession before retreating into the darkness.
For each chapter, award-winning artist Tony Angell has depicted these scenes with his signature pen and ink illustrations, which grow increasingly light and then dark as our bird day passes. Working closely together to narrate and illustrate these unique moments in time, Hauber and Angell have created an engaging read that is a perfect way to spend an hour or two—and a true gift for readers, amateur scientists, and birdwatchers.
From morning to night and from the Antarctic to the equator, birds have busy days. In this short book, ornithologist Mark E. Hauber shows readers exactly how birds spend their time. Each chapter covers a single bird during a single hour, highlighting twenty-four different bird species from around the globe, from the tropics through the temperate zones to the polar regions. We encounter owls and nightjars hunting at night and kiwis and petrels finding their way in the dark. As the sun rises, we witness the beautiful songs of the “dawn chorus.” At eleven o’clock in the morning, we float alongside a common pochard, a duck resting with one eye open to avoid predators. At eight that evening, we spot a hawk swallowing bats whole, gorging on up to fifteen in rapid succession before retreating into the darkness.
For each chapter, award-winning artist Tony Angell has depicted these scenes with his signature pen and ink illustrations, which grow increasingly light and then dark as our bird day passes. Working closely together to narrate and illustrate these unique moments in time, Hauber and Angell have created an engaging read that is a perfect way to spend an hour or two—and a true gift for readers, amateur scientists, and birdwatchers.
Author / Editor information
Mark E. Hauber is professor and executive director at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and previously served as the Harley Jones Van Cleave Professor of Host-Parasite Interactions at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is the author of The Book of Eggs, also published by the University of Chicago Press. Tony Angell is the author and illustrator of over a dozen books related to natural history, including The House of Owls and In the Company of Crows and Ravens.
Reviews
“Stunning. . . . Sometimes we are oblivious to miraculous objects in our daily lives.”
— Praise for Mark E. Hauber’s "Book of Eggs", The Guardian“Angell writes (and draws) with the absolute authority of one who has studied, rehabilitated, lived with, and loved the animals his whole life.”
— Praise for Tony Angell’s "The House of Owls", Wall Street Journal“A wonderful book that simultaneously made me nostalgic about a cave full of oilbirds in Trinidad and a kiwi running between my legs in a New Zealand sleet storm—and further informed me about the lives of birds. A brilliant collaboration between a first-rate behaviorist and my favorite bird artist.”
— Paul R. Ehrlich, author of "Life: A Journey through Science and Politics" and "The Birder's Handbook"“As much a meditation as a book, Hauber and Angell’s Bird Day gives us a bird to think about at each hour of the day and night. They take us around the world, visiting birds including the brown-headed cowbird (5 a.m.), Hauber’s own research subject, the ocellated antbird (noon), Cook’s petrel in New Zealand (10 p.m.), and twenty-one others. The narrative brilliantly captures the moment; the art makes the moment come alive. Bird Day is an excellent pairing of text and art, one I will return to again and again as the hours go by.”
— Joan E. Strassmann, author of "Slow Birding: The Art and Science of Enjoying the Birds in Your Own Backyard"“Bird Day is a brisk, high concept read. It lends the reader a pair of giant wings to soar across the globe, peeking in each hour on the lives of the world’s most fascinating birds. Author Mark Hauber is a research ornithologist, and the text often draws upon his studies. We meet cooperatively breeding superb starlings; a secretary bird that stomps venomous snakes into submission; a duck, keeping one eye open while sound asleep; a bat hawk that swallows its nocturnal prey whole. Lushly patterned chiaroscuro drawings by Tony Angell heighten the mystery and delight of these tall-but-true bird tales.”
— Julie Zickefoose, author and illustrator of “Letters from Eden,” “The Bluebird Effect,” “Baby Birds,” and “Saving Jemima”“One could not ask for two better field companions than Mark Hauber and Tony Angell as they observe some of the world’s most interesting birds. Their book gives us all new ways of seeing, hearing, and thinking about them—hour by hour—without ever leaving home.”
— Robert McCracken Peck, author of "A Celebration of Birds" and "The Natural History of Edward Lear"“‘What do birds do all day long?’ Ecology professor Hauber answers this question by taking an hour-by-hour, worldwide tour of two dozen bird species. . . . Short vignettes about each bird are beautifully illustrated with Tony Angell's lively drawings, bringing the wonders of bird behavior to life.”
— Booklist"A delightful book by research ornithologist Mark Hauber and illustrator Tony Angell. From owls hunting at night to the common pochard resting with an eye open to spot predators in the daytime, this is a global, hour-by-hour account of individual bird lives."
— New Scientist"Fine drawings by Tony Angell, with a grey background, have a quality recalling old woodcuts."
— Birdwatching Magazine"[A] delightful, rather quirky window into the world of birds. . . . Hauber’s enthusiasm comes across on every page and Angell’s drawings are superb, capturing the essence of each species to complement the text and illustrating the dark and light hours. This is a book to read in an hour but then to leave around to pick up and savour each entry and its corresponding drawing."
— Ibis"One of my favorite books of the year! Bird Day is a thrilling little book for adult readers featuring 24 stories of different birds, with a single bird during a single hour in each chapter beginning at midnight. The illustration collection from artist Tony Angell is a thing of beauty, dramatic and full of motion and intricate detail despite being simply pen and ink. Hauber’s a grand and capacious storyteller, connecting the physiology, behavior, and experience of each chapter’s focus bird to a wide range of history, culture, and ecology. Bird Day is a lovely treat, perfect for a nightstand or coffee table."
— American Biology TeacherTopics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
viii -
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Preface
xii -
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Artist’s Note
xv -
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MIDNIGHT: Barn Owl – Tyto alba
1 -
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1 AM: Little Spotted Kiwi – Apteryx owenii
7 -
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2 AM: Oilbird – Steatornis caripensis
13 -
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3 AM: Kākāpō – Strigops habroptilus
17 -
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4 AM: Common Nightingale – Luscinia megarhynchos
23 -
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5 AM: Brown-Headed Cowbird – Molothrus ater
27 -
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6 AM (SUNRISE): Silvereye – Zosterops lateralis
35 -
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7 AM: Bee Hummingbird – Mellisuga helenae
41 -
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8 AM: American Robin – Turdus migratorius
47 -
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9 AM: Eclectus Parrot – Eclectus roratus
53 -
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10 AM: Indian Peafowl – Pavo cristatus
59 -
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11 AM: Common Pochard – Aythya ferina
65 -
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NOON: Ocellated Antbird – Phaenostictus mcleannani
69 -
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1 PM: Secretary Bird – Sagittarius serpentarius
75 -
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2 PM: Emperor Penguin – Aptenodytes forsteri
79 -
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3 PM: Superb Starling – Lamprotornis superbus
85 -
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4 PM: Common Cuckoo – Cuculus canorus
89 -
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5 PM: Indian Myna – Acridotheres tristis
95 -
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6 PM (SUNSET): Standard-Winged Nightjar – Caprimulgus longipennis
101 -
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7 PM: Great Snipe – Gallinago media
105 -
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8 PM: Bat Hawk – Macheiramphus alcinus
111 -
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9 PM Black-Crowned Night Heron – Nycticorax nycticorax
115 -
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10 PM: Cook’s Petrel – Pterodroma cookii
121 -
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11 PM: European Robin – Erithacus rubecula
129 -
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Epilogue
133 -
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Acknowledgments
136 -
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Further Reading
137 -
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Index
145
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 19, 2023
eBook ISBN:
9780226819419
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook ISBN:
9780226819419
Keywords for this book
ornithology; animal behavior; Wildlife science; zoology; birdwatchers; habitat; nature; wilderness; conservation; environmentalism; preservation; owls; hummingbird; penguin; parrots; africa; north america; Eurasia; New Zealand; Antarctica
Audience(s) for this book
For a non-specialist adult audience