Backyard Beauties
With the return of spring comes the return of many backyard birds intent on their habitual rituals of courting, nesting, egg incubating and fledging their young. Two new books from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt take close looks at the complex lives of numerous wild birds.
In One Wild Bird at a Time: Portraits of Individual Lives, Bernd Heinrich meticulously observes 17 varieties of birds that appeared near his cabin in the woods of Maine. He writes, "My watching birds of a particular species was usually stimulated by an anomalous observation that sparked a question." In these essays, he spies on flickers nesting in his cabin through a hole in his bedroom wall, studies how the weather and lack of a close food source forces vireos to abandon their clutch of eggs, ponders why male sapsuckers drum so loudly to attract a mate--coming to a plausible conclusion--and questions why broad-winged hawks line their nest with fresh fern leaves on a daily basis.
In Baby Birds: An Artist Looks into the Nest, Julie Zickefoose, a wildlife rehabilitator and artist, offers her observations and watercolor paintings of 17 species of baby birds. Zickefoose carefully watched nesting birds and managed in words and paint to capture the intricate, daily transformations they went through. She writes, "Some of the birds I would come to study and draw metamorphose from a writhing pink hatchling no bigger than your thumbnail to a flying bird in eleven days." She studies wrens, phoebes, cardinals, warblers, chickadees and other common birds found in backyards on a precisely timed daily basis, and her observations are enhanced by more than 400 watercolors. Both books complement each other as the authors give readers two different and intimate looks into the courting rituals, nesting habits and parenting skills of a multitude of wild birds. --Lee E. Cart, freelance writer and book reviewer



