Christmas Bird Count


(c) 2009 Karl GerstenbergerEvery year, my wife and I celebrate the holidays by taking part in the National Audubon Society's annual Christmas Bird Count. Today was our local count, and it was pretty damned miserable standing out on the the windswept and ice-glazed Rockland Breakwater as the sun came up. My face is still frozen in one of those rictus smiles that used to be a by-product of the poison laughing gas the Joker used on his victims in the old Batman comics.

We were fortunate to be accompanied by good friends as usual, one of whom (Karl Gerstenberger) took the photo at left. That always warms the spirit. We saw a decent number of birds—no sky-darkening flocks of winter finches or anything—but enough birds to renew my faith that the human race hasn't thrown this one-and-only world of ours totally out of whack just yet.

Library Journal Starred Review

The Poacher's Son won't be out until the end of April, but I got some advance good news in the form of a starred review in Library Journal:

A richly imagined portrait of the vanishing wilderness in New England's farthest reaches, Doiron's well-written debut is also a taut thriller and a thoughtful examination of the complicated relationship between father and son. Of a piece with Castle Freeman Jr.'s All That I Have about a Vermont sheriff, this will also appeal to fans of C.J. Box's Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett.

I'll post the link when it comes live. But yeah, I'm bouncing off the walls here with happiness.

 

Why Magazines Will Survive

I echo Maria Rodale's thoughts in Folio:

The Internet is a technology that enables people to go out in SEARCH of things. I’m all for that and love it to pieces. But sometimes, I just want things to FIND me. Sometimes, I am just tired of looking and typing and seeking, and I just want to sit on my comfortable couch and be surprised when I turn the page.

That’s why I believe magazines won’t die.