'Bird-watchers are tense, competitive, selfish, shifty, dishonest distrusting, boorish, pedantic, unsentimental, arrogant and - above all - envious.'
So says Bill Oddie, and he should know. He's been a bird-watcher for over thirty years. He's probably the only person ho could have written this book. Only he combines the inside knowledge with the tactlessness and lack of decency required to spill the beans. The misery, the scandal, the heartbreak of bird-watching - it's all in BILL ODDIE'S LITTLE BLACK BIRD BOOK.
William "Bill" Edgar Oddie OBE is an English author, actor, comedian, artist, naturalist and musician, who became famous as one of The Goodies. A birdwatcher since childhood, Oddie has now established a reputation for himself as an ornithologist, conservationist and television presenter on wildlife issues. Some of his books are illustrated with his own paintings and drawings.
Oddie studied English Literature at Pembroke College at the University of Cambridge, where he appeared in several Cambridge University Footlights Club productions. One of these, a revue called A Clump of Plinths, was so successful at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe that it was renamed Cambridge Circus and transferred to the West End in London, then New Zealand and Broadway in September 1964. Meanwhile, still at Cambridge, Oddie wrote scripts for TV's That Was The Week That Was.
His first television appearance was in Bernard Braden's On The Braden Beat in 1964. Subsequently, he was a key member of the performers in the BBC radio series I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again (ISIRTA; 1965), where many of his musical compositions were featured. Some were released on the album Distinctly Oddie (Polydor, 1967). He was possibly one of the first performers to parody a rock song, arranging the traditional Yorkshire folk song "On Ilkla Moor Baht'at" in the style of Joe Cocker's hit rendition of the Beatles' "With a Little Help from My Friends" (released on John Peel's Dandelion Records in 1970 and featured in Peel's special box of most-treasured singles).
On television Oddie was co-writer and performer in the comedy series Twice a Fortnight with Graeme Garden, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and Jonathan Lynn. Later, he was co-writer and performer in the comedy series Broaden Your Mind with Tim Brooke-Taylor and Graeme Garden, for which Oddie became a cast member for the second series. Oddie, Brooke-Taylor and Garden then co-wrote and appeared in their television comedy series The Goodies. The Goodies also released records, including "Father Christmas Do Not Touch Me"/"The In-Betweenies", "Funky Gibbon", and "Black Pudding Bertha", which were hit singles in 1974-75. They reformed, briefly, in 2005, for a successful 13-date tour of Australia. Oddie, Brooke-Taylor and Garden voiced characters on the 1983 animated children's programme Bananaman. He has occasionally appeared on the BBC Radio 4 panel game I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, on which Garden and Brooke-Taylor are regular panellists.
This is a superb little book for anyone that has been active in "competitive" birdwatching. I'm not sure whether he coined the terms, but I'm sure he was the first to put words like birder, twitcher, ticks and mega-ticks onto paper. Sentences like "...have an impressive sounding German name. There is a general fallacy that any good binoculars have a 'Z' in the name or possibly 'SCH', or even better both..." concerning binoculars (bins), are enough to get you rolling around on the floor as you recognise yourself and "friends"!
Even if you aren't into "birding", I'm sure you will be amused by Oddie's descriptions of the people, their equipment and the objects of their obsession.
My copy of this is white, which I thought was a joke (cf. Monty Python's "Big Red Book"), but it also autographed, so I'm happy. Despite this being Oddie's first ornithology book, it's the last one I had left to read, so I knew what to expect from him. This volume is a rough guide to birdwatching full of humour but not devoid of serious points and truthful observations. I also love Bill's drawings.
Excellent and humorous look at birding in the 70's/80's; an exciting time in British birding, before all they hype and all the massive increase in people involved.
Better days for us old-timey birders.
An added advantage is that I am on one of the photos; of the Forster's Tern at Falmouth
Well. As an American birder I find "An Avid Birder" or "The Verb: To Bird" are far superior and far funnier. It had its moments but I found it to be dated and odd.
Hailed as the first honest description of the birding word, and therefore both informative for the non-birder and funny. Bill's drawings add lots of charm.
Thoroughly entertaining, easy-to-read, funny and pokes a warranted amount of fun at the more pretentious of twitchers and birders among us. Would recommend to intermediate-level birders wanting to advance their knowledge of the hobby, using their existing experience as a base.
3.8 out of 5. I’d asked my wife for Bill Bailey’s book on birdwatching and she couldn’t get it, so she got me this little gem instead! I remember reading it in the 1980s crying with laughter over some of the pieces. It’s dated now, obviously - for that reason I’ve dropped it from 5 stars. The days of queuing up at payphones to get news of rare birds are gone now, but the core aspects of twitching - the jealousies, competitiveness and general weirdness remain the same!
Bill Oddie is one of Britain's greatest wildlife stars. He's gone from being a TV comedy star in THE GOODIES to a presenter of the likes of SPRINGWATCH, all the while remaining visible and championing our feathered friends. His LITTLE BLACK BIRD BOOK is a cynical, tongue-in-cheek exploration of the subject of birdwatching, presented as a loose guide with plenty of humour along the way.
Those of us who know Oddie are aware of his bipolar condition, and as such this book comes across as a bit, well, wacky. It's zany and odd, startling at times and unique, full of crazy humour and bizarre anecdotes which you're never quite sure are real or not. I'm not sure how much use this is as an actual guide, but it certainly made me laugh a lot and virtually everything Oddie says is oh-so-true.
At last I have read this minor classic! It is fun, well-observed - and makes some serious points. Recommended to any birder - or to anyone who wants to glean some understanding of what makes birders tick (pun intended).
Trying to birding for the first time? then this books really fit for you..all the pictures, writing is so fun enough so you so everyone can read it by heart..two thumbs up for Bill Odie..