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Sebastian Ritscher

A MOST REMARKABLE CREATURE

Jonathan Meiburg

The Hidden Life and Epic Journey of the World’s Smartest Bird of Prey

An enthralling modern voyage of discovery to meet a rare and mysterious bird of prey that puzzled Darwin, fascinates modern-day falconers, and carries secrets of our planet's deep past in its family history.
In 1833, a young Charles Darwin was astonished by a strange animal he met in the Falkland Islands: a set of handsome, social, and oddly crow-like falcons that were "tame and inquisitive", "quarrelsome and passionate", and so insatiably curious that they stole hats, compasses, and other valuables from the crew of the Beagle. Darwin met many unusual creatures in his five-year voyage, but no others showed an interest in studying him, and he wondered why these birds were confined to remote islands at the tip of South America, sensing a larger story. But he set this mystery aside, and never returned to it; and almost two hundred years later, Meiburg picks up where Darwin left off. These birds now called striated caracaras still exist, though they're very rare; and A Most Remarkable Creature reveals the wild and fascinating story of their history, origins, and possible futures in a series of travels throughout South America, from the fog-bound coasts of Tierra del Fuego to the tropical forests of Guyana. Along the way, Meiburg draws us into the life and work of William Henry Hudson, the Victorian naturalist raised in Argentina but moved to London as adult from where he championed caracaras as an unsung wonder of the natural world; and takes us to falconry parks in the English countryside, where captive birds perform incredible feats of memory and problem-solving. A Most Remarkable Creature is a hybrid of science writing, travelogue, and biography, as generous and accessible as it is sophisticated, and much more than a book about birds: it's a journey to uncover moments of first contact between humans and animals, science and religion, and the mismatched continents of what Europeans mistakenly called the New World. Jonathan Meiburg is a writer, ornithologist, and adventurer who's best known as the singer of the band Shearwater. His writing has appeared in The Believer, Talkhouse, and The Appendix. His unique career between the sciences and the arts makes him an ideal guide for a journey that takes in the deep history and landscapes of an entire continent, from the lush forests of Guyana to the windswept Falkland Islands. He lives in central Texas.
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Published 2021-03-30 by Knopf

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Meiburg elevates himself to the top ranks of science writers with this enthralling debut on the obscure caracara... Meiburg's evocative prose ... will bring armchair naturalists into the wild with him. Fans of literary nature narratives will be thrilled by his lyrical account, and eager to see where Meiburg goes next. Read more...

A fascinating look at history, evolution and how humans interact with the creatures that we share the planet with. Meiburg is an enormously skilled writer... Skillfully researched and beautifully written, Meiburg's debut is a most remarkable book. Read more...

Meiburg's debut... explores the hidden forces that gave rise to our world and the species we share it with. Abounding with intriguing characters and too-close-for-comfort wildlife encounters, the book is an enrapturing tale about the unfolding evolutionary drama of our planet. Read more...

Jonathan Meiburg's superb book begins as the story of a bird and ends having marshaled natural history, travelogue, biography, and memoir to conjure people and places both known (Darwin) and not (the South America of the glyptodonts). Along the way he shows how inaccurately we understand our species' place in the world. Read more...

...captivating stuff, full of insights into not only our planet's evolutionary past but also its future. Read more...

More than anything else, rock musician... Meiburg's book... seems so attuned to the personalities, intelligences, and feelings of the animals he encounters. The book chronicles his journey across South America, in pursuit of the brilliant, and extremely rare, species of bird, the striated caracara, and Meiburg's tone is awed that the magnificent creatures around him might even acknowledge or pay attention to him. It's a humble, grateful book, full of wonderful ornithological knowledge. Read more...

If caracaras were able to read - and immersing myself in Mr. Meiburg's vivid prose I sometimes fancied they just might be - this book would give them a lot of information about that exceptional creature named Jonathan Meiburg. ... A lavishly talented nature writer, [he] weaves a seamless narrative from the most diverse observations... a master of descriptive nuance... Read more...

Utterly captivating and beautifully written, this book is a hugely entertaining and enlightening exploration of a bird so wickedly smart, curious, and social, it boggles the mind. Along the way, Meiburg takes us from the Falklands to the UK, from Guyana to the Antarctic and Florida, and from deep time to the present and back again, describing in brilliant language why these birds--and their planet--are the way they are. If you love birds, natural history, science, travel, adventure, or just great writing, you will be rapt.

What a remarkable feat: taking a mysterious, oddly social, keenly intelligent bird of prey that most of the world has never heard of and animating the creature with such beauty that it comes fully alive in our imaginations. Jonathan Meiburg went on an equatorial search for the latter-day descendants of the age-old caracara and brought back--a little like Darwin himself--travel report, documentary, biography, social history, scientific treatise. And all of it so wonderfully readable.

If you've ever been at a dull party and then met a person who suddenly brightened the vibe with energetic conversation about his abundant enthusiasms, you know a little of what it's like to come upon Jonathan Meiburg and his first book during a pandemic... Like travel itself, "A Most Remarkable Creature" is more journey than destination. While Meiburg seems disinclined toward environmental preaching, he does want to ignite our curiosity. The book elegantly reminds us that we cheat ourselves when we underestimate creatures we have deemed low, annoying or common. Read more...

I'm in love with this book. If you like great writing, strange historical twists, adventure, nature, music and/or birds this will quickly become one of your all-time favorite books.

[Meiburg's book] trains "a lover's eye", in [the reviewer's words], on this curious, intelligent and mischievous raptor, offering an "effervescent tribute" to their unique lives, set amid a "seamless narrative."

This book is an evolutionary labyrinth, taking Meiburg to the end of the world following a single, curious predator. Vivid, beautiful, and scientifically rich, crawling with jungle ants, blasted by Antarctic winds, his tales will transport you from the page to wilder places.

...among the joys of "A Most Remarkable Creature" are the ways [Meiburg] braids together different journeys: that of a South American land mass; that of the caracara; that of long deceased naturalists such as Charles Darwin (who called the caracara "quarrelsome and passionate") and William Henry Hudson, whom Meiburg refers to as a sort of avatar; and that of Meiburg himself, though he frames himself largely as observer.... Years of research and years of study yielded a book as curious as the caracaras, one that leaves room for discovery: biographical, biological and geological. Read more...

A rich, sprawling romp through time and far-flung, fabulous spaces, in pursuit of one of Earth's most enigmatic, engaging, and shrewdest creatures.

An ambitious, impressive debut. The book's manifold strands will engage all sorts of readers, including bird lovers, science buffs, and eco-adventure fans. Read more...

Raptor rapture: A Q&A with Jonathan Meiburg Read more...

UK: Bodley Head ; Chinese: Golden Rose

To call this a bird book would be like calling Moby-Dick a whaling manual... Meiburg's book is full of good seeing and the good writing that comes from it. Read more...

NPR's Here and Now, in which Jonathan says he hopes readers get from the book that "the world is much less known than we think. The entire world does not live on the internet. The entire world does not even live in books. Not everything that is known is written and not everything written is known. If there's anything that I want people to come away with it's an interest in looking outside the things we're just told are important." Read more...

A Most Remarkable Creature is on the long list for a Carnegie Medal. The fiction and non-fiction winners will be announced on January 23rd.

...Meiburg has a knack for seeing from a slightly different angle and translating his view beautifully... [and,] like all great nature writers, has the ability to make the world seem simultaneously gigantic and tiny. Everything is part and parcel...a triumphant debut for an author. Read more...

It is famously said of Moby-Dick that it is somewhat more than a book about whales. The caracara is at the heart of Meiburg's project, but his narrative deals with many topics, ranges over enormous swathes of the world's wilder landscapes, and introduces us to a large cast of fascinating creatures, not a few of whom are human... ...What is delightful about his book is the love of the world it expresses, and the calm fortitude with which it considers our current predicament. Read more...

A Most Remarkable Creature does what only the very best science and nature writing can. Jonathan Meiburg reminds us that our world is not fully known, that the prehistoric walk among us, and, most of all, how exciting and unnerving it feels to encounter an animal you've never seen before, and, even more, to find that animal staring right back.

Meiburg's voice is poetic; where other nature writers are known for the images they paint of landscapes, here are presented impressions, concepts as complex as species' movements over geologic time, in a way that is at once clear and beautiful... [he writes] with a naturalist's eye and an artist's voice. Read more...

A Most Remarkable Creature is much more than a scientific profile. It is a grand intellectual adventure involving dinosaurs, DNA, naturalists, exploration and survival. Meiburg is a gifted storyteller, and one can't help but fall under the same spell he did.

[A] wonderful display of travelogue... istory of science, and natural history.

What a remarkable feat: taking a mysterious, oddly social, keenly intelligent bird of prey that most of the world has never heard of and animating the creature with such beauty that it comes fully alive in our imaginations. Jonathan Meiburg went on an equatorial search for the latter-day descendants of age-old caracaras and brought back--a little like Darwin himself--travel report, documentary, biography, social history, scientific treatise. And all of it so wonderfully readable.

An entire book devoted to the odd caracara? Yes, and the narrative rarely lags... Meiburg's enthusiasm matches Darwin's, and readers will share it... Not only a fine writer, the author is clearly an adventurer... Wholly captivating natural history.

Riveting... Perhaps the most striking thing about Meiburg's book is not just that he paints the world of the caracara so vividly, but that alongside the history of these beautiful birds, Meiburg manages to tell a story of South America and its geography that is just as riveting as the birds of prey that call it home... He takes our known world and spins it on its head, revealing complexities and wonders about not just the field of ornithology, but the planet and humankind as well so that we might be inspired to continue seeking out the unknowns in order to discover something new. Read more...

During an interview with John Jeremiah Sullivan in The Paris Review, Meiburg says: "Paying close attention to birds draws me out of myself, which I crave more and more as I get older. Music does exactly the same thing - it gives you the feeling of being humbled and exalted at once... Until I started trying to understand where the caracaras came from, I'd never realized that North and South America, biologically and geologically, are basically strangers to each other. Lumping them together as a single "New World," as Europeans did, really doesn't make much sense. Tectonic forces kept the Americas apart for a hundred million years. When they finally joined hands at the isthmus of Panama a few million years agoa short time, if you're a paleontologist - two sets of animals who'd pursued completely separate evolutionary journeys confronted each other, which one scientist called "one of the most extraordinary events in the whole history of life." Read more...

Caracaras are not like other birds, or even other birds of prey. Curious, wide-ranging, gregarious, and intelligent, the ten species of caracara are a scientific puzzle that has intrigued biologists since the days of Darwin. And this book -- as curious, wide-ranging, gregarious, and intelligent as its subject -- is not like any other book that I have encountered. A Most Remarkable Creature is not only about a bird, but about the community of people that has formed, almost accidentally, around the bird, and beyond that about humankind itself.

...astonishing...this book goes into evolutionary time to explore the impact of continental drift, migration patterns, dinosaurs, and more to better understand this most curious of birds. It's one of my favorite books I've read this year. Read more...

A fascinating, entertaining, and totally engrossing story of these under-appreciated birds, deftly intertwining natural history and human history, and with insights and lessons that go far beyond the subject birds.