Wild air : in search of birdsong / James Macdonald Lockhart.
Publisher: London : 4th Estate, 2023Copyright date: ©2023Description: 342 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- still image
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780008399535
- 0008399530
- 598.1594 23 L816

Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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Central Library المكتبة المركزية | 598.1594 L816 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | قاعة الكتب | 48100 |
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
The bird that hides its shadow : Nightjar -- Mountain of the trolls : Shearwater -- The blacksmith of the stream : Dipper -- Up in the lift go we : Skylark -- Xylophone in the trees : Raven -- Rather like the howl of a dog : Black-throated diver -- Little horn in the rushes : Lapwing -- As though she lived on song : Nightingale.
"A book about birds, birdsong and the countryside they inhabit, from the critically acclaimed author of Raptor. In Wild Air, James Macdonald Lockhart sets out to write about a series of birds as though he has his granny's role of listening to birds' songs and calls and relaying what she heard to her aged and by then quite deaf father - the famous naturalist Seton Gordon. From a nightjar's strange churring song on a heath in the south of England, to a lapwing displaying over the machair in the Outer Hebrides, he writes about eight different birds who he has spent most time with, returned to most often and relays what he hears. The eight species are all representative of a different habitat. Nightjars on a lowland heath; shearwaters on a mountain overlooking the sea; dippers on a river; skylarks in farmland; ravens in woodland; divers on a loch; lapwings on the coast; and nightingales in dense scrub. Not all of the birds are songbirds in the traditional sense, though each possesses its own distinctive music. That music can vary from the strange, as in the weird gurgling sound a shearwater makes inside its burrow, to the joyous exuberance of the skylark's song. Sometimes, he hears a lot, and sees little (shearwaters in the pitch dark); sometimes he sees a lot, but hears little (black-throated divers on their loch). But in every case the sounds the birds make become an introduction to their lives - an audible introduction to the birds and the places they are found"--Publisher's description.