Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 288
Trim: 6½ x 8¼
978-1-56663-856-2 • Hardback • April 2010 • $26.95 • (£19.99)
978-1-4422-5193-9 • Paperback • March 2016 • $19.95 • (£14.99)
Michael McCarthy is one of Britain's leading writers on the environment. Formerly environment correspondent for the Times of London, for the last ten years he has been environment editor of the Independent. Three times he has been named environment reporter of the year and in 2007 was awarded the medal of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds.
Preface
1 Spring-Bringers
2 Out of Africa
3 A Sense of Wonder
4 Unlocking the Soundscape
5 The Spirit of the Place
6 A Promise of Lazy Days
7 What’s So Special About Swallows?
8 Understatement on a Fence Post
9 The Wildness Within
10 The Wandering Voice
11 Warnings from the New World
12 Vanishings
13 A Loss of a Different Order
Acknowledgments
Index
In luminous prose, British writer McCarthy addresses the cultural significance of migratory songbirds, from nightingales to turtle doves to the European Cuckoo, on the heart and soul. . . . A stunning and profound book that will make readers realize how very much these amazing winged creatures matter.
— Booklist
Say Goodbye to the Cuckoo is a terribly moving book . . . about the vast numbers of vanishing spring birds.
— Kristina Chetcuti; Times Of Malta
An elegiac book about migration.
— Charles Clover; Times Online
'What would it mean to us if the spring-bringers stopped arriving?' Would it be like losing rainbows? Michael McCarthy wonders, or roses or hope or music? It's a new tactic—asking us to imagine our world without the species, sounds and smells we take for granted. And it works. A sense of wonder is replaced with a strange hollow feeling—one part guilt, one part regret and one part denial.
— Los Angeles Times
Vivid . . . especially affecting. . . . A passionate primer on loss.
— Times Literary Supplement
This is the most important book I have read for a long time.
— BBC Countryfile Magazine
A beautiful and important book.
— Simon Barnes, author of How to Be a Bad Birdwatcher
McCarthy (environmental editor, The Independent, UK) writes eloquently about the losses of European 'spring bringers,' migratory birds which have historically been an important part of the folklore, literature, and culture of people in Europe and North America. Focusing on the 'miraculous aerial river' of birds 'flow[ing] out of Africa into Europe,' the author discusses the radical environmental changes which have been adversely affecting their numbers. Many species are fast disappearing, suggesting the unthinkable: future silent springs. The numbers of different migrant species that failed to return to Britain in the 13 years leading up to 2007 ranged from 37 to 67 percent. Disruptions affecting these birds include climate change, which is also affecting the cycles of plant and insect life on which birds depend; forest losses in the developing world; and human population growth—particularly in Africa. Intensified agricultural practices, such as Europe's Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), have taken a further toll. From the early 1960s until 2004, when major revisions were made, this policy featured ecologically unsound use of pesticides and fertilizers. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readership levels.
— Choice Reviews
A plea to pay attention to winged creatures before it's too late.
— The Washington Post
Michael McCarthy details the environmental challenges faced by European cuckoo and other songbirds in England. McCarthy's book is worth reading because many of the problems experienced by these birds also face our own backyard birds here in the United States.
— The Advocate
The mix of discovery of the real bird with myth, poetry, and legend is simply exquisite. . . . I recommend this book for everyone even remotely interested in birds. I also recommend it for students in ornithology classes or classes where 'sustainability' is a theme, for the book contains a wealth of scientific information melded beautifully with what spring-bringers mean to us.
— Journal Of Field Ornithology
Michael McCarthy's Say Goodbye to the Cuckoo combines an exploration of the crisis that temperate-zone migrant birds are now facing with a celebration of Europe's birds—their beauty, their haunts, their symbolic and cultural value in our civilization and traditions. . . . [His] descriptions are glorious.
— Cornell Lab of Ornithology