How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher

Compare book prices at www.BookkooB.co.uk
BookkooB : Cheap books, whichever way you look at it.
Cover of How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher by Simon Barnes 190409595Xtitle:

How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher

author:Simon Barnes
format:Hardcover Buy How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher Now
publisher:Short Books, London
released:September 2, 2004
isbn:190409595X
isbn-13:9781904095958
storeavailabilityitem pricedelivered 
Amazon UK    
The Hut    
Sprint Books    
Blackwells    
WH Smith (collect in store)    
Base    
The Book Place    
WH Smith    
Pick a Book    
Global Investor    
Waterstones    
The Book People    
zavvi    
Play.com    
Another Bookshop    
History Bookshop    
Tesco Books    
BookFellas    
Foyles    
Samedaybooks    

Above you will see price and availability details for How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher by Simon Barnes from the leading UK book stores.

To allow you to quickly compare prices, the stores are arranged in order of delivered price, cheapest first. Click on a store name to buy this book or to view further details.

Books Related to How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher Simon Barnes - ISBN: 190409595X

View other editions of How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher.
View books by Simon Barnes.

Customer Reviews

Don't believe the few negative reviews - Rated 5/5
I've long since been a fan of Simon Barnes' - due to his regular spot in the RSPB magazine. However, the book exceeded my expectations. It seems I've been a bit of a bad bird watcher for a while, but he's unspired me to improve my birding skills without worrying about not being "good" enough. I may be wrong, but I suspect those that found his refreshing humour to be "patronising" are, in fact, "good birdwatchers".


Insightful book for good or bad birdwatchers - Rated 4/5
Like many birdwatchers I'm quite a bad birdwatcher. I enjoy watching birds and consciously try to improve my birding skills but can't be bothered with scanning through a flock of 500 gulls to find the elusive white-winged bird or 500 terns to find the one that may possibly be of the rarer roseate variety. Whether you are a good or bad birdwatcher or maybe not even a birder at all, there is plenty to enjoy and discover in this book.

How To Be A Bad Birdwatcher is an amusing book on how to watch birds by journalist Simon Barnes. It serves as a witty introduction to beginners and acknowledges facts to more experienced birders which they had realised inside but never fully expressed or thought through. In the book, the Award-Winning writer cleverly uses simple language and well-reasoned arguments to make fundamental, quite complex points on why we like watching and identifying birds, how to get more involved in birdwatching and much more.

How To Be A Bad Birdwatcher is a delightful, easy-to-read book. It is recommended for anyone who has a vague interest in birds as well as providing telling anecdotes to those of us who are already birdwatchers - good or bad ones.


save the world! fly everywhere - Rated 3/5
Bill is humourous and likeable. This guy is humourous and unlikeable. Makes the world of difference. And he goes by plane alot.. tut tut, mate .. practice what you preach


fell in love with it - Rated 5/5
My son-in-law gave this book to me and my husband, as we started birdwatching about two years ago (I can't say we are good yet, but this summer we were overjoyed to realize just how many birds we already "knew", several by their song, or even just by their « jizz »). So I started reading it listlessly, thinking it would be a dry effort of humor about the joys and sorrows of birdwatching. I did not get what I bargained for. What I got was a book that grabbed me by the shoulders and delighted me with unexpected and delectable surprises. It was a book that I couldn't wait to get back to, that I started each new chapter with a fluttering heart, wondering « what next ? ». I definitely fell in love with it. And with Barnes, too, if you want to know the truth.

It is only about birdwatching on the peripheries (and even here, it is not like anything you'd read in a regular bird book, I can guarantee you). In its essence it is about a man whose way of looking at life has changed thanks to these lovely and mysterious creatures of the air, and who would like to let others in on the secret. I know what he means. I have always loved nature, and yet how much more I get from it now that I see (and look for) the birds ! It is like I was only seeing one-half, no, one-third of the picture before. It is also a soul-baring book : to write so philosophically about one's relationship with nature, to then wrap it all up in a veil of humor takes insight and courage. For example, Barnes writes, « My understanding of the tree, the butterfly and the pebble has altered in some cruious way because I know their names. That is because knowing something's name is a highly significant thing. It is the most significant thing you can tell someone about yourself. An American will announce his name with this first breath ; the English prefer to keep people waiting before imparting that treasured scrap of information. »

It is a book of poetry : « But there he was against the cold blue sky, every feather picked out by the low winter sun, and he sang his song of spring and gave it absolutely everything. It was a song that made the whole day better. A common bird : a rare moment. »

So buy it, read it, treasure it. And then go watch birds like your life depended on it. Because more than you know, it really does.


Beautifully written - Rated 4/5
Part autobiography, part philosophy, part user manual, part call to arms, this book takes Simon Barnes' fascination with birds and nature at large as the starting point for an assessment of our shifting relationship with our environment and reminds us of the importance of the small pleasures, not forgetting along the way to dispel many of the myths about birdwatching which might deter the person who is more keen than knowledgeable.

While I think I understand some of the other reviewers' doubts about the tone of the book, it is undoubtedly beautifully written and is to be highly recommended to anyone with any interest in the world about us.

Click here to return to the price comparison table

search for books

similar books

A Bad Birdwatcher's Companion How to Be Wild The Secret Lives of Garden Birds Collins Bird Guide Birds Britannica The Meaning of Sport Bill Oddie's Little Black Bird Book RSPB Pocket Birds RSPB Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Birds ...But Were Afraid to Ask Bill Oddie's Gripping Yarns

bestselling books


compare other prices

Cheap DVDs at dvdspot
Cheap Games at playspot

quick links

subject directory : Biographies, Business, Children's, Fiction, Food & Drink, Health, History, Home & Garden, Horror, Humor, Religion, Science Fiction, Society, Sports, Travel, other subjects.

information pages : About BookkooB, Release Dates, Bookmarklet, Disclaimer, Privacy Policy. Compare Book Prices.