Birding Under the Influence: Cycling Across America in Search of Birds and Recovery

Birding Under the Influence: Cycling Across America in Search of Birds and Recovery

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  • Create Date:2023-10-24 10:19:47
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Dorian Anderson
  • ISBN:1645022234
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

"One hell of a ride。"―Nick Offerman, actor, woodworker,  New York Times  bestselling author "Candid and often moving reflections 。 。 。 make for absorbing reading。 。 。 。 [This is] a memoir of a journey that was more than just a chase after numbers。"― Booklist  (starred) At a personal and professional crossroads, a man resets his life and finds sobriety, love, and 618 bird species, cycling his way to a very Big Year。 In Birding Under the Influence , Dorian Anderson, a neuroscience researcher on a pressure-filled life trajectory, walks away from the world of elite institutions, research labs, and academic publishing。 In doing so, he falls in love and discovers he has freed himself to embrace his lifelong passion for birding。 A North American Big Year―a continent-spanning adventure in which a birder attempts to see as many species as possible in twelve months―is a massive undertaking under any circumstances。 But doing it on a bike while maintaining sobriety? That’s next level。 As Dorian pedals across the country, describing the birds he sees, he confronts the challenges of long-distance treacherous weather, punctured tires, speeding cars, and injury。 He encounters eccentric characters, blistering blacktop, dreary hotel rooms, snarling dogs, and an endless sea of smoking tailpipes。 He also confronts his past struggles with alcohol, drugs, and risky behaviors that began in high school and followed him into adulthood。 Birding Under the Influence is a candid, honest look at Dorian’s double life of academic accomplishment and addiction。 While his journey to recovery is simultaneously poignant and inspiring, it is ultimately his love of birds and nature that provides the scaffolding to build a new and radically different life。

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Reviews

Steven

I heard about this book when the author was interviewed on the Life List podcast。 I was fortunate to get an advanced copy through NetGalley -- so glad I did。Anderson takes on a birding big year (trying to see as many birds as possible within a geographic area in calendar year) in 2014 as a way of breaking from the academic treadmill he'd been running, and as a way to evaluate his 4 years of sobriety。 His goal was to see as many birds as possible in the lower 48 states, travelling entirely by bic I heard about this book when the author was interviewed on the Life List podcast。 I was fortunate to get an advanced copy through NetGalley -- so glad I did。Anderson takes on a birding big year (trying to see as many birds as possible within a geographic area in calendar year) in 2014 as a way of breaking from the academic treadmill he'd been running, and as a way to evaluate his 4 years of sobriety。 His goal was to see as many birds as possible in the lower 48 states, travelling entirely by bicycle。 Having read a few books on other birders' big years, I found his approach refreshing。 Yes, seeing the birds was important and the frame upon which this adventure was hung。 But the true accomplishment was having the time to test his own limits, reflecting on his rocky past with substance abuse, and building a new path forward。The trip he describes was grueling and filled with dangers, among them angry dogs, busy roads, collisions and crashes。 But he also met and stayed with a an array of people around the country who were following his journey。 Each had their own version of hospitality, and each provided context and lessons for Anderson as he grew along the way。 Sometimes, the parallels between his life and the behavior of a bird species are made a little awkwardly, and at times the dialog in remembered conversations can feel a bit stilted, but I suppose that's hard to get around writing 10 years after the event。 It was just noticeable, but didn't really take away from the overall story or Anderson's amazing accomplishment。 Overall, I really enjoyed this book。 If you have an interest in birding, bicycling or memoirs of substance abuse, give this a try。 It may seem alike a strange combination, but life is like that。 And I'm really glad that Anderson is still around and able to share this with a larger audience。Thank you NetGalley and Chelsea Green Publishing for sending this book for review consideration。 All opinions are my own。 。。。more

Andrew Spink

I love cycling and I love nature (why isn't my hashtag #BotanicalMountainBiking more used?) so, at first glance, this was a book that could have been written just for me。 It started talking about lapwings, one of my favourite birds and (as a European) one that I am very familiar with and, despite its iridescent plumage, find hard to imagine being exotic。 The vast majority of the other birds mentioned were unknown names to me, but I did enjoy when the author didn't just list them but told us a bi I love cycling and I love nature (why isn't my hashtag #BotanicalMountainBiking more used?) so, at first glance, this was a book that could have been written just for me。 It started talking about lapwings, one of my favourite birds and (as a European) one that I am very familiar with and, despite its iridescent plumage, find hard to imagine being exotic。 The vast majority of the other birds mentioned were unknown names to me, but I did enjoy when the author didn't just list them but told us a bit about them as well。 The cycling aspect was also interesting。 He started as pretty much a novice, so I was left wondering why he didn't try out the clip-on pedals first, why he hadn't trained even a little for this and why he couldn't have got himself better tyres to avoid all the punctures。 But maybe that comes down to American roads。 I lived a couple of years in Illinois, and the locals thought I was bonkers for cycling to work。 The shouted abuse, car horns and rubbish at the side of the road were all very familiar。 I was even stopped by the police once because a car driver had complained that I was cycling on the road rather than on the (rubbish-filled) grass verge。 As it happens, I had taken my Illinois driving test the week before and had to inform the police that it was actually illegal for me to cycle on the verge。 It reminded me how lucky we are to have decent cycling infrastructure here, and also the luxury of not being scared of violent locals if we cycle on back roads。The book had a third theme, alcoholism。 That felt a little crowded。 Although the three aspects are all very interconnected, that did mean that the focus was sometimes lost as the author switched from one thing to another。 The book is also an autobiography, and of course, with every autobiography you are left wondering how reliable the narrative is。 What has been left out and what has been exaggerated。 When describing his scientific work, the author uses quite a lot of scientific terminology and in some places I got the impression that he was trying to impress the reader with his erudition, rather than explain matters。 He assumes that readers know what the dendrites and axon of a neuron are - or does he expect them to google it? As a biologist, I could follow it all, but I can imagine that some readers will feel forced to skip those paragraphs。 The prose is mostly fairly straightforward。 Some of the phrases are a bit bizarre ("conversation flowed as freely as urine" was very odd), but it was all quite readable。 The twin theme of cycling and 'twitching' reminded me of Lief Bersweden's book 'Where the wildflowers grow'。 Although Dorian Anderson's book doesn't have the wonderful quality of prose of Bersweden, it is still a worthwhile and enjoyable read, and his personal struggle and ultimate success in relation to his addiction has the potential to inspire those suffering from similar problems。 Acknowledgment: This review is based on a free pre-publication copy of the book obtained from the publisher via the Netgalley platform, in return for an honest review。 。。。more

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