Cover Image: A Most Remarkable Creature

A Most Remarkable Creature

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Member Reviews

I learned quite a bit about caracaras in Meiburg's book, which is part travel log, part scientific documentary, and part biography of Hudson, an 1800s naturalist who championed this beautiful, clever bird. I've seen caracaras throughout Texas, but it was enlightening to learn about their South American relatives, and how very intelligent and playful they are.

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*I was given an ARC in exchange for an honest review.*

Ordinarily I love this sort of book — being involved in falconry, raptor rehabilitation, and having a deep interest in birds. But I felt like this one wandered too much. I was hoping to learn more about caracaras, but much of the book branched out into discussions of evolutionary theory that didn't seem necessary to me.

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A version of this review previously appeared in Shelf Awareness and is republished here with permission.

If a bird can be said to have inappropriately flown beneath the radar of public fascination, that is the caracara. Jonathan Meiburg's fabulously epic account, A Most Remarkable Creature, sets the record straight. Meiburg is frontman for the band Shearwater (named after a long-distance marine bird); in 1997, he received the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship, which awards a year's travel to remote communities, sparking his enchantment with islands, birds and natural history.

In the falcon family, caracaras are unlike other birds of prey, who focus on hunting. Caracaras, innately curious and "disarmingly conscious," seek out interaction regardless of food. Calling a caracara a bird of prey, says Meiburg, "feels like calling the painters of the Italian Renaissance a group of unusually gifted apes." Caracaras fascinated Darwin, who wrote more about them than any other bird.

Caracaras will "pluck the cap from your head, tug at the zippers of your backpack, and meet your eye with a forthright, impish gaze." This "earnest, playful quality" is what spurred Meiburg's research, yet 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, daydreaming about "keeping a striated caracara in my apartment. It would be the world's most exasperating roommate, but watching it build a nest of shredded T-shirts, LP jackets, and guitar strings in my bookshelf might be worth it."

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