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Peter Cashwell

Autor von The Verb To Bird

3+ Werke 119 Mitglieder 5 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

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Peter Cashwell dabbled in everything from radio announcing to improve comedy before settling into his career as a writer and teacher. His lifelong fascination with birds and language eventually inspired him to write The Verb 'To Bird', a Barnes Noble Discover Great New Writers selection (Paul Dry mehr anzeigen Books, 2003). Since 1995, Cashwell has taught at Woodberry Forest School in Virginia, where he lives with his wife and two sons. Follow him on Twittercommat;PeterCashwell and at PeterCashwell.com. weniger anzeigen

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USA
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Mildly amusing essays on birding and birds. Got a little cloying after a while, but there were a few funny bits.
 
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JBD1 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 10, 2016 |
but I need it now...I neeeeeeeeeed stuff. Pre-ordering is nice, and all, but I want total instant gratification.

***

I don't normally pretend to be objective about books, but on this occasion I'm even less so: the author is an old friend and I'm married to one of the experts mentioned here in.

Cashwell writes most like Bill Bryson, if Bryson was an English teacher with the hobby of birding. The unifying theme here is lines that people draw to separate things, but how there's always ambiguity, whether between what we mean by male and female, or at the edge of extinction, or in the definition of species, or between genres. Really, he's interested in pretty much everything including driving, and art, and music. Even if, like me, you're not interested in spotting birds out in the middle of nowhere at dawn, you'll enjoy the book because it's entertaining and discursive and amusing. We've all read it at our house, or are planning to, now that a copy isn't being read by someone else.

Personal copy
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Kaethe | 1 weitere Rezension | Oct 16, 2016 |
There's a passage early on that I think points to the heart of the book: "...all lines are imaginary, established only because human beings need them for purposes of division. It would be a mistake to pretend that merely because the line doesn't really exist, the differences on either side of it do not exist either." It's an intriguing thought. For better or for worse, our nature is to divide ourselves.

Peter Cashwell has composed series of related musings about all manner of boundaries, lines and divisions. The compilation also has a very personal feel to it, no doubt due to the frequent anecdotes from Mr. Cashwell's own life. And birding. The dude is into birding.

Along Those Lines is entertaining, informative and well-written. I recommend it for the non-fiction reader in your family.
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Daniel.Estes | 1 weitere Rezension | Mar 14, 2016 |
As an avid birder, I am drawn toward books on the topic. This is tied for the top slot of all time for me with Providence of a Sparrow by Chris Chester. Hilariously funny (if you are a birder). Highly, Highly recommend it!!
 
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Cygnus555 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 22, 2008 |

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Werke
3
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1
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119
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#166,388
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½ 3.6
Rezensionen
5
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4
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