Book Review: The Big Year
by Bonnie Wong
A substantial
account of any Big Year competition is difficult to write for at least two
reasons. First, the competition lacks
extensive guidelines. The American
Birding Association provides a mere two pages expositing five rules for any
birder, not just competitors, to follow only
if one wants an official record of total birds observed within a particular
area and time frame. (Contrast this with
the 4-page rulebook for the national yo-yo contest held every year in Chico.) Second, tracking competitors’ daily
whereabouts is nearly impossible. Unlike
most contests, the Big Year allows competitors to remain obscure until the
official results are published, but after the big reveal, notes on spontaneous
jaunts from the previous year can go missing from even the most meticulous
records. Despite these challenges, The
Big Year author Mark Obmascik presents a clear and animated study into the
quirky world of competitive birding.
An anonymous
call alluding to the newsworthy, but overlooked, world of birding led Obmascik
to follow three birders on their Big Year exploits of 1998. These birders’ intensely singular focus to
make history for observing as many bird species as possible in North America is
matched only by their disparate life experiences, personalities, and
approaches: Sandy Komito, an industrial contractor from New Jersey, doggedly
pursues his birds from one coast to another to break his previous Big Year
record established in 1987, while sparing time to badger, agitate, and alienate
people potentially useful to him. Al
Levantin, a retired chemist-turned-salesman-turned-executive, relies on his
bird acumen and natural charisma to earn goodwill from fellow birders and
ultimately build alliances with Greg Miller, an immediately likable,
determined, recently divorced software programmer forced to juggle a heavy
heart, his love for birds, a precarious credit line, and his tedious job of
scanning computer code for Y2K bugs.
Following these
characters alone makes for a fascinating story, but instead of burdening
readers with birds’ names, places, and dates, Obmascik unhesitatingly
articulates birds’ characteristics and locations to draw readers into the
inherent beauty that touched off the Big Year tradition. More delightful, though, is the fact that
Obmascik never hesitates to lend gravity to a competition that has few rules
and no prerequisites to enter. First,
and most obviously, participation in a Big Year demands a staggering financial
and time commitment. Komito, Levantin,
and Miller spend at least $31,000 over a minimum of 125,000 miles.
Second, with
money and time on the line, these tenacious birders also contend with
temperamental El Nino weather of 1998, which at once sweeps nonnative birds
into North American territory for an unpredictable period and dumps enough
inclement weather to thwart even the most ardent competitors. Indeed, the most interesting stories in The
Big Year involve Komito, Levantin, and Miller’s race to observe birds in
remarkably terrible weather on brutal, uninhabited Attu Island, part of the
Aleutian Islands and a depository of rare birds. Finally, even after making every personal and
financial investment to exhaustion, Obmascik’s main birders strive to respect
the remarkable history of a competition that surprisingly began as contests to
kill as many birds possible in a single day and gradually evolved into
modern-day birding. As bird fervor grew,
so did the number of birding guidebooks, making the competition accessible to
non-experts but vulnerable to tactics that seemingly defied unspoken
requirements to compete in a Big Year - knowledge, interest, and
self-reliance. In this light, Obmascik
traces Komito, Levantin, and Miller’s chase of a Big Year record, with some
toeing the line of birder-integrity more incessantly than others.
Despite the
book’s strengths in presenting each birder’s perspective, The Big Year
suffers one minor flaw: the three birders inexplicably go silent on the
question of why they pursue the Big Year record when they no longer seem to
want to. Perhaps they love competition
in itself - outpacing, out-traveling, out-spending each other; perhaps they
adore birding in itself - nature, beauty, variety. Rather than asking his subjects directly,
Obmascik relies on descriptions of continually adverse conditions and
homesickness each endures and finally allows a random rock-climber to tell
Komito why he still birds: “It’s a rush.”
This uncharacteristic reticence leads readers only to feel pity, not
sympathy, for the birders who have become slaves to the Big Year record.
Despite its
slight weakness, The Big Year offers lively and satisfying insight into
the Big Year competition. For those who
hope to participate in their own birding competition or for those who just want
a fascinating read, The Big Year should be at the top of the list.
If you would like to participate in your own birding competition, try this spring's Birdathon!
Pick up your copy of The Big Year at Tucson Audubon's Nature Shop!
Pick up your copy of The Big Year at Tucson Audubon's Nature Shop!
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