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Dreambirds : The Strange History of the Ostrich in Fashion, Food, and Fortune

Dreambirds : The Strange History of the Ostrich in Fashion, Food, and Fortune

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Rating: 0 stars
Summary: From Publisher's Weekly
Review: "Once in a while a book comes along that makes magical a seemingly odd subject....With stylistic ease and elegance, Nixon tells a story that is greater than its parts."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Dream of the Heart
Review: Dreambirds is the best book I've read in very, very long time--the sort of story you find yourself remembering images and lines from for days. This is a book you will immediately pass to a friend or give as a gift: it's that good. Rob Nixon's story is really two stories in one: a wonderfully colorful and wholly original mix of personal history, memoir, and the outward history of a dream in the shape of a large, clumsy, often ill-tempered and fascinating bird: the ostrich. Nixon's exotic childhood unfolds on the far edge of the South African desert, the Karoo, site of a great ostrich rush years before, and scenes of his touchingly quirky family, memories of his father, and his boyhood dreams are rendered with an honest tenderness and true heart. Interspersed are the reflections of the adult Nixon, chapters on ostrich fact, history, and lore, and fantastical tales of what man does in the name of following--even owning--a dream: the ostrich farmers who risk everything and lose, and Nixon himself, who risks all and wins us over on every page. Dreambirds might be compared to William Least Heat-Moon's Blue Highways or Ian Frazier's Great Plains, but it is more than simply a reflection of the natural world. Rob Nixon is a naturalist who has turned his love of the world inward too--to family, the past, and the most exotic land of all: our vanished childhoods. He is a naturalist of the human heart. Don't be fooled by the ostriches on the cover! Or do! They truly become dreambirds in this great and touching book. You'll love it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Dream of the Heart
Review: Dreambirds is the best book I've read in very, very long time--the sort of story you find yourself remembering images and lines from for days. This is a book you will immediately pass to a friend or give as a gift: it's that good. Rob Nixon's story is really two stories in one: a wonderfully colorful and wholly original mix of personal history, memoir, and the outward history of a dream in the shape of a large, clumsy, often ill-tempered and fascinating bird: the ostrich. Nixon's exotic childhood unfolds on the far edge of the South African desert, the Karoo, site of a great ostrich rush years before, and scenes of his touchingly quirky family, memories of his father, and his boyhood dreams are rendered with an honest tenderness and true heart. Interspersed are the reflections of the adult Nixon, chapters on ostrich fact, history, and lore, and fantastical tales of what man does in the name of following--even owning--a dream: the ostrich farmers who risk everything and lose, and Nixon himself, who risks all and wins us over on every page. Dreambirds might be compared to William Least Heat-Moon's Blue Highways or Ian Frazier's Great Plains, but it is more than simply a reflection of the natural world. Rob Nixon is a naturalist who has turned his love of the world inward too--to family, the past, and the most exotic land of all: our vanished childhoods. He is a naturalist of the human heart. Don't be fooled by the ostriches on the cover! Or do! They truly become dreambirds in this great and touching book. You'll love it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Review of Dreambirds
Review: In "Dreambirds," Rob Nixon begins with a memory of a particular (omnivorous, as it happens) ostrich of his childhood, then explores the surprisingly pervasive role of ostriches in his personal history, in the settlement of his hometown and nearby "feather boomtowns," and finally in the new American West, where ranchers value ostrich hide and meat in place of plumes. His journeys lead him to provocative considerations of settlement and exile, from the nineteenth-century Lithuanian Jews who were lured to Africa as feather prospectors to an American couple who left Illinois to make rattlesnake crafts in the Arizona desert. Most compelling, however, is Nixon's candid look at the migrations in his own family history and his troubled relationship with his homeland. With a flair for anecdote and a mix of humor and compassion, he inhabits his childhood self as vividly as he inhabits the dramatic landscape of the South African desert--and in so doing, transforms both worlds from foreign to familiar. Rob Nixon's book is an inspiration to the memoirist who envisions a place for his or her story in the global currents of history and migration; it is equally an inspiration to the scholar who pursues in print that elusive, fruitful union between the political and the personal, between researched fact and fantasy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Desert Dreams
Review: Rob Nixon's Dreambirds is the journey reminiscent of perhaps our finest writers today--of Naipaul, Rushdie, W.B Sebald and others--, exiles who float between past and present, continent to continent, yet writing as if they have never truly left the childhood landscapes lost to them in the political, cultural and economic upheavals of the modern world. Written in a meditative and at times even dreamlike prose, Nixon introduces us to his family, like him, keen observers of the natural world of South Africa, which becomes for them a means to identify with a land and culture far removed from their Northern European roots. Nixon's memoir is held together by the story of the ostrich, the dreambird, which attracted flocks of pioneers to South Africa's Karoo desert region hoping to make their fortunes on the feathers of this mysterious remnant from prehistoric times. As Nixon tells the story of South Africa's pioneers who banked their dreams on the plumes of the ostrich, we not only learn of the fascinating natural history of the ostrich, but of Nixon's own affection for a world he could never quite feel at home in but savors nevertheless. The politics of South Africa are of course never too far away from Nixon's meditations on how his family and his life were shaped by the ostrich boon. In his restrained prose, one feels the ever present weight of South Africa's troubled double world of black and white, a world Nixon knows he can never escape. This consciousness of the racial divide of his people seeps into nearly every encounter and story, and it's Nixon's gift that he never has to directly speak about what it must feel like to carry the weight of remorse of South Africa's colonial past. He doesn't have to because it is obvious in the choices he makes to weave into his narrative the stories of ostrich ranchers and political activists which he goes to great lengths to balance with that of his own poetic self-examination. The narrative takes one more turn when Nixon moves to America, a place more like South Africa than Americans would like to believe according to Nixon. Here he hopes to put behind him the conflicted emotions surrounding his homeland and the memories of the delicate desert landscape of his youth. After living for a few years in New York, a place Nixon describes as ironically forgiving for emigrants like him, he takes a trip to Arizona to do some travel writing and discovers to his surprise the similarities of the Sonoran Desert to that of his Karoo. There too Nixon finds that the pioneer spirit of the American West is alive and well and not all that different from that of what he remembers from back home. And once again, in flies or rather runs the dreambird, the ostrich, but no longer raised for its flamboyant feathers for fashionable women, but to be fattened, fired over the grill and fed to health-conscious Americans. The get-rich schemes of his ancestors have come back in force in Arizona in the form of the ostrich cowboys. And for nothing else one should read this book for Nixon's comic observations of the surreal world of the modern American West. Dreambirds is a memoir that never quite feels like a memoir, as Nixon deftly lets his own story and that South Africa's reflect through his sensitive observations of the human spirit and how it is revealed to us again and again by the land and its innocent inhabitants that continue to survive despite our reckless dreams to live at their expense.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Divided across continents
Review: This brilliant attempt to unite the disparate elements of a life should be read by anyone whose adult and childhood selves are split across continents as well as time.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Not a history of the ostrich
Review: Though well written, this is NOT a history of the ostrich, but rather an autobiography of a man who grew up within view of the ostrich industry in his native South Africa, and then was able to run across them and write about them later in life.

There is really nothing new in this book with regards to the history of the ostrich, and the author indeed had nothing to do with the industry at all - at any point in his life.

If you are buying this book for insights into the history of this magnificent bird in food, fashion and fortune, then you will be disappointed to be sure.

Nice story of Nixon's life, well written, and only occasionally pedantic; however a history of the ostrich this is not.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Struthio camelus - the sparrow camel
Review: You don't need to know much more than the biological name of the common ostrich to know that this is a weird bird. Sparrow camel!, what is that? Obviously the ornithologists who discovered the bird were confused about it; as confused, perhaps as the ostrich sometimes looks with it's blank, non-blinking stare. Have you ever seen one up close? The term 'bird brain' is appropriate.

This is all rather unkind, and in fact, unfair to the ostrich. A bird rumored to be so dumb that it supposedly sticks it's head into the sand when threatened; actually we are the dummies if we believe this bit of folklore - it's a myth. The ostrich is in fact remarkably well adapted to it's environment - the savannas of Eastern and Southern Africa, and has had a close association with man for the better part of a century, providing us with food and making fortunes for us.

It is this relationship between man and ostrich that Mr Nixon explores in DREAMBIRDS, specifically his remembrances of the bird from his childhood in South Africa. A town called Oudtshoorn, near where he grew up, was, before WWI, the capital of the worldwide ostrich feather industry. In its heyday it supplied 100,000 tons of plumes to the fashion centers of Europe. The town was then known as the Jerusalem of Africa - a consequence of the large resident community of jewish feather merchants.

That's about all the history there is though. The book is a more a biography, and the ostrich is the common theme, the link between Nixons early youth in South Africa and his adult life in his adopted home - the US. We run into the bird at the ostrich races in Chandler, Arizona and again at various ranches throughout the Southwest. It's not only places, but people that are mentioned. There are some interesting characters involved in the ostrich business. One of the central people in the book is Mr Nixons father, and we are treated to a bit of reminiscing about the relationship between father and son. DREAMBIRDS is a well written and humorous look at this "gawky, boneheaded creature"; gladly it's light on the father and son dynamic, but sadly it's also light on the development and history of the industry. For lovers of birds and biographies.


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