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Corvus: A Life with Birds

2008 non-fiction book by Esther Woolfson


Summary

2008 non-fiction book by Esther Woolfson

FieldValue
nameCorvus: A Life with Birds
imageCorvus, A Life with Birds.jpeg
captionBook cover
authorEsther Woolfson
audio_read_byMaureen Beattie
countryScotland
languageEnglish
genreNon-fiction
publisherGranta
published2008
pages337
isbn9781847080295

Corvus: A Life With Birds by Esther Woolfson is a non-fiction book about a family which adopts various corvids; a rook named Chicken, a magpie named Spike, and a crow named Ziki. It is Woolfson's first book.

Plot

The book details the family's bird rescues, mostly consisting of crows. The rook Chicken was adopted by Woolfson as a fledgling and she began feeding the bird a diet of minced meat, eggs, and nuts. Chicken's full name is Madame Chickeboumskaya, after an American drag queen. Chicken has a habit of hoarding food in boot laces, using a table to incubate infertile eggs, and following Woolfson around the house. The rook is able to go wherever she wants to in the house and she "sleeps, bathes, roosts, and preens" in Woolfson's office. Chicken acts similar to a cat or dog and was 18 years old when the book was written. Woolfson's life with Spike, Ziki, and other birds are documented. Interspersed in the book is information about bird experts and the science about the birds.

Reception

Katheen Yale of Orion Magazine said, "As human and wildlife habitats continue to overlap in a struggle for resources, Haupt’s Crow Planet and Woolfson’s Corvus both question, then show us, how to coexist with what Haupt calls "this slight discomfort." And even how to "rejoice in its meaning."" Jennl Frazer of The Jewish Chronicle wrote that "Woolfson's gentle, humorous prose style offers a delightful insight into an unfamiliar world, and if in the mix she throws in a little medieval history here, and a little environmental science there, it's all to the good." Tim Dee of The Guardian gave a mixed review concluding with, "By the end, much as I had enjoyed this book, I was egging on the hawks."

Maureen Beattie read part of the book in five BBC Radio 4 episodes in 2008 as Book of the Week.

References

References

  1. Dee, Tim. (29 August 2008). "A rook called Chicken".
  2. "About Esther".
  3. Skea, Ann. (2009). "Corvus: A Life with Birds".
  4. Finlayson, Iain. (16 August 2008). "Iain Finlayson's non fiction reviews of the week: August 16, 2008".
  5. Frazer, Jennl. (22 August 2008). "Interview: Esther Woolfson".
  6. Yale, Kathleen. "Crow Planet: Essential Wisdom from the Urban Wilderness & Corvus: A Life with Birds".
  7. Beattie, Maureen. (2008). "Corvus: A Life with Birds".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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