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Why peacocks? : an unlikely search for…
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Why peacocks? : an unlikely search for meaning in the world's most magnificent bird (edição: 2021)

de Sean Flynn

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404618,445 (3.94)2
"An acclaimed journalist seeks to understand the mysterious allure of peacocks-and in the process discovers unexpected and valuable life lessons"--
Membro:JulieStielstra
Título:Why peacocks? : an unlikely search for meaning in the world's most magnificent bird
Autores:Sean Flynn
Informação:New York : Simon & Schuster, 2021.
Coleções:Sua biblioteca
Avaliação:****
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Why Peacocks?: An Unlikely Search for Meaning in the World's Most Magnificent Bird de Sean Flynn

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I read this book as it was my Bookclub selection. I was curious what an author might write regarding selecting and raising peacocks. While some of the story and information was interesting, I felt that it went on long after my interest had waned. ( )
  AstridG | Dec 30, 2021 |
Memoir of a family keeping peacocks as pets--among other critters. Much peacock lore and history here. The book flowed nicely with gentle humor in spots. ( )
  janerawoof | Aug 10, 2021 |
There is a restaurant thirty miles or so from my house that pre Covid, my hubby and I would go to once a month. In back of the restaurant was a barn, a pond where the owners kept a range of animals and birds, swans etc. He also had peacocks and when one parked their car the peacocks would often be trolling through the parking lot. Beautiful birds, these not afraid if humans at all.

In this memoir of sorts, the author, explains how he and his family came to own peacocks. Though he himself, not his young sons, would be the one that became attached, obsessed with doing everything right for his new charges. Three, Carl, Ethel and Mr. Pickles. He also went to great lengths to learn the history of these birds, so the reader follows along. From early British courts, to Greek mythology, to the Spaldings of Chicago, to of course Flannery O'Connor we learn the historical and personal significance of these birds. He also travels to Scotland and other places where peacocks are kept. The chapter on the killing of these birds was difficult and not pleasant, but the majority of the book is informative, humorous, he has a wry sense of humor, and wonderful to read.

Plus, everytime I think of a peacock named Mr. Pickles, I just have to grin. The wonderful minds of children.

ARC from Edelweiss. ( )
  Beamis12 | Aug 5, 2021 |
Sy Montgomery's warm review in the New York Times of Flynn's engaging book had me reserving it at the library immediately. As it happened, a bookstore I follow on Facebook held a free online live author talk the day the book came in for me. One benefit of Zoom author talks is that the author can present while sitting inside the peacock (or, more correctly, peafowl) pen and we could see the cast of characters wandering around (and shrieking) in the background.

After many years of covering wars, mass shootings and other catastrophes, Flynn admits he had gotten to a place where he struggled to maintain his necessary "distance" from the grief and trauma he wrote about. In the online interview, he mentions a career combat photographer he knows who did "brilliant" work in Iraq, Afghanistan and other such hellholes for a long time. And now he only takes photos of fish. Flynn has peacocks. He and his family on their little "phony farm" in North Carolina already had two chickens, a pug, a cat who lived in the okra patch, and a tenant mini-horse. But one day he gets a text asking if he could use a peacock. "Yes, please," replies his wife (a lifelong admirer of Flannery O'Connor, a famous peafowl fancier). They know virtually nothing about them, but his first view of an India blue male in all its splendor mesmerizes him. So there they are, hosts to two peacocks and a peahen (first mistake).

This is not the cute Durrells-in-Corfu kind of charm; madcap pratfalls and hilarity do not consistently ensue - it is often funny, but in the dry, wry voice of a middle-aged man actually a bit puzzled by what has happened to him. He is surprised by the cheery charm of chickens, and it takes him a while to understand the peacocks, who are cautious, quite serious, and much harder to win over. But being a journalist - and a very good one - he knows how to learn about stuff, and writes about it expertly, thoughtfully, and vividly. He weaves in chapters on the history and mythology surrounding peacocks, the structure of their spectacular trains, and the people who breed and keep them (including an heiress who founded a hospital near where I work, and "invented" a new cross-breed of peafowl). There are battles where feral peafowl wander upscale neighborhoods: some people love them, others hate them, and a serial killer starts leaving pea-corpses in the streets. They are big, noisy, destructive - they fight their reflections in shiny car bumpers and scream all night long during the breeding season. Flynn learns they are not at all the elegant, decorative yard ornaments he had expected. They are themselves, with their own needs, desires, and thoughts, just wanting to live their peacock lives. And though he doesn't investigate it in the same long-form journalism way, there is an important thread about how we relate to, are enchanted by, and have our hearts broken by our relationships with animals: his young son's longing for a pet snake, the delightful Barred Rock hens Comet and Snowball, the pug, and how you choose to deal with a foolish young peacock who has gulped down zinc nails and nuts and washers and a copper grommet and requires chelation, weeks of veterinary care and hours of surgery. Warning: animals die in this book.

There might be a bit more background information at more length than is strictly necessary (admirable as he may have been, several pages on Andrew Carnegie feel a bit tangential). But overall, this is a skillfully written, informative, and often moving piece of work (I read it in a day.) It also taught me that when the time comes, I think I will stick with chickens. ( )
  JulieStielstra | May 26, 2021 |
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