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Thinking with Birds

Felice Wyndham

What the stork with an African arrow through its neck taught Europeans.

How the tapping of woodpeckers in the Californian redwoods forecasts rain.

Why some see the robin redbreast as a death omen.

How the nightingale carried messages in a Persian tale of star-crossed lovers.

Why the swifts that circle Oxford's dreaming spires were once called devil-screechers.

How the red kite came back from the edge of extinction and gave us hope.

In Thinking with Birds, Oxford anthropologist Felice Wyndham answers each of these fascinating questions and more, introducing us to the beautiful, ingenious birds that have informed and enriched our lives. We meet the falcons who hunt alongside us, the waxwings who tell us when berries are ripe for picking, and the honeyguides who lead us to wild bees' nests deep in the rainforest. We learn what birds' astonishing migration patterns reveal about our planet's seasons and geography and how, as feathered dinosaurs, they have transformed our understanding of deep time.

Lyrical and eye-opening, Thinking with Birds explores the profound and surprising ways birds have shaped how we think, around the world and across time, and how repairing our relationship with birds can transform our own lives and our planet's future.

  • Classification : Natural History, Environment & Conservation
  • Pub Date : APR 9, 2026
  • Imprint : John Murray
  • Page Extent : 336
  • Binding : TPB
  • ISBN : 9781529386516
  • Price : INR 899
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Felice Wyndham

Oxford anthropologist Felice Wyndham's life-long love of birds began spotting endangered condors with her father from their home in the LA hills. Raised in Uruguay and Hawai'i as well as California, she went on to study plant ecology at Brown. Since then, her research has taken her around the world and led her to spend long periods in Rarámuri communities in Northern Mexico and Ayoreo settlements in Paraguay. She has taught at the University of Oxford, the University of British Columbia, and the Pontificia Catholic University of Chile, and for the past six years has led a groundbreaking global project to produce the first ever digitised Ethno-Ornithology World Atlas.

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