Intricate and delicate as birdsong, Kyo Maclear's clear-eyed observations of the natural world and our place in it challenge the velocity of modern life. A year spent birding is a year spent in passionate introspection. As she discovers beauty in urban cityscape, she leads us to turn fresh eyes to our surroundings. Her beloved birds become messengers of both loss and hope.
--Julia Cameron, author of The Artist's Way
"Every now and then you read a book that changes the way you see the world. For me, Birds Art Life is one such book. The writing is marvelously pure and honest and light. At the same time, magically, it is erudite, generous, and brimming with meaning and event. Birds Art Life is a book I know I will return to again and again for inspiration and solace."
--Barbara Gowdy, author of The White Bone and We So Seldom Look on Love
"A beautifully crafted memoir that elevates the ordinary with intelligence and humility."
--Leslie Feist, musician
"A profound, charming memoir of art, books, life -- and birds .... This book is a lovely song -- a symphony -- for all of us."
--Minneapolis Star Tribune
"Birds Art Life chronicles [Maclear's] journey, exploring the many shapes passion can take, and the many spaces natural beauty can occupy."
--Huffington Post
"I can hardly put this down ...Yes, it's about birding. But so much more."
--Charlotte Observer
"[A] fragile fluid commentary ... The reader can relax in the solitude of [Maclear's] musings as the words gently flow into the consciousness."
--Manhattan Book Review
"[A]n incandescent exploration of beauty, inspiration, art, family and freedom that seems to leave no topic out of its binocular scope."
--Toronto Star
"[A] literary jewel box ... Maclear's book is appealing in its appreciation of non-human nature in the midst of city life, agnosticism about the place of human activity in the midst of nature's rhythms, and exploration of the relationship between captivity and freedom."
--Publishers Weekly
"The simple precision of Maclear's prose belies the depth, as if the book were the tip of the iceberg and what she has elided or omitted constitutes the rest .... Writers and others will find inspiration in the advice to stop and hear the birds."
--Kirkus Reviews
"Maclear's musings will appeal to readers who enjoy nature writing focused most on the search for meaning in a hectic world."
--Booklist