
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 3 reviews on

The true story of the greatest conspiracy in US history--and how to fight back.
Have you ever seen a baby pigeon? You haven't, have you? No one has, not in many, many years. They used to be everywhere. You couldn't walk out of your front door in New York City in the 1930s without seeing dozens of those little guys scurrying around. Today, there are millions of grown up pigeons in New York, but not a baby pigeon to be seen. That's because they come out of the factory as adults.
"Provides a wry commentary on an era where conspiracy theories are no longer relegated to shadowy internet forums and the fringes of media. By detailing an utterly ridiculous alternate history wherein your pet parakeet is in fact an insidious agent of espionage, [McIndoe & Gaydos] offer a sharp lesson in media literacy."
--New York Times
"Cosplaying the paranoid fringe, Birds Aren't Real delivers a knowing satire of American conspiratorial thinking in the century of QAnon. Beneath the collegiate humor, however, lies a profound grasp of conspiracism's psychic appeal, and a valuable provocation. How to best fight false claims and conspiracies online is currently the subject of fierce debate among social and computer scientists, policymakers, even the Supreme Court...Could it be, as a consequential election looms and violent online fantasies spray into real life, that we are going about it all entirely the wrong way?"
--The New Republic
"A silly and winning spoof."
--Publishers Weekly
"Quirky and humorously provocative."
--Kirkus