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| A Guide to the Birds of East Africa | 
enlarge | Author: Nicholas Drayson Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Category: Book
List Price: $22.00 Buy New: $11.83 You Save: $10.17 (46%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 43820
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 208 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 0547152582 Dewey Decimal Number: 823.92 EAN: 9780547152585 ASIN: 0547152582
Publication Date: September 18, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Absolutely Brand New & In Stock. 100% 30-Day Money Back. Direct from our warehouse. Ships by USPS. 1+ million customers served-In business since 1986. Happy Customers is Our #1 Goal. Toll Free Support
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Product Description A beguiling novel that does for contemporary Kenya and its 1,000 species of birds what Alexander McCall Smith's Ladies Detective series does for Botswana
For the past three years, the widower Mr. Malik has been secretly in love with Rose Mbikwa, a woman who leads the weekly bird walks sponsored by the East African Ornithological Society. Reserved and honorable, Malik wouldn't be noticed by a bystander in a Nairobi street?except perhaps to comment on his carefully sculpted combover. But beneath that unprepossessing exterior lies a warm heart and a secret passion.
But just as Malik is getting up the nerve to invite Rose to the Nairobi Hunt Club Ball (the premier social occasion of the Kenyan calendar), who should pop up but his nemesis from his school days. The jokester Harry Khan, good-looking in a flashy way and quick of foot, has also become enraptured with the object of Malik's affection.
So begins the competition cooked up by fellow members of the Asadi club: whoever can identify the most species of birds in one week's time gets the privilege of asking Ms. Mbikwa to the ball.
Set against the lush Kenyan landscape rich with wildlife and political intrigue, this irresistible novel has been sold in eight countries and is winning fans worldwide.
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| Customer Reviews:
Having been to Africa December 28, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I had just returned from volunteering in Tanzania, the country on the southern border of Kenya which is the setting of this book. By chance I chose A Guide to the Birds of East Africa from the "new fiction" shelf at my local library . What a delight! So much of the background rings true to my experience. The insight into East African culture is rewarding and helped me put my recent experience in perspective. But the most fun of all is the story with its charmingly flawed characters and accounts of birding woven together to tell a tale of modern Africa.
A delightful tale about birds and morality December 14, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Mr Malik is a short, slightly overweight, middle-aged man with a combover. He is hopelessly in love with Rose Mbikwa who is the guide for his birdwatching group, but he is too shy to ask her out. When his old school rival returns and tries to move in on Rose, the club that Malik belongs to sets up a friendly birdwatching competition to win the rights to ask Rose to a dance.
This was a sweet story about a quiet honest man who, though not perfect, tries to help others in an unpretentious way. It is a kind of "tortoise and hare" story, and though it seems throughout the story that the hare is going to win the race, things seem to work out in the end. Along the way, we learn that sometimes stopping in the middle of a race to help someeone doesn't always mean that you would lose that race.
I would highly recommend this to anyone that is looking for a quick read about a nice guy and you can learn about birds along the way!
Sweet and a bit more... December 13, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is a charming, pleasant entertainment with a few moral lessons some of which are a bit heavy-handed but most of which the reader absorbs without really knowing it. If you like stories set in East Africa, as I do, this will be at least an absorbing diversion. It should be noted that what you will learn only about East African birds and their habitat is rather slight. In fact the whole novel is rather slight, but sweetly so and it is so unassuming that it sems unfair to hold its lightness against it.
This is a charmer November 10, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I picked this book up at the library by chance and now it will be a Christmas gift for many friends, it is simply wonderful. A charming story about "average" people who may not be so very average. I loved it.
"For the last three years Mr. Malik...had been passionately in love with Rose Mbikwa." September 19, 2008 14 out of 14 found this review helpful
As you wing into the fictive delights of Nicholas Drayson's A Guide to the Birds of East Africa, you might wish to keep the Princeton Field Guide illustrations of these colorful aviary wonders at your elbow. Mr. Malik and others in the novel describe spying (or hoping to, at least) godwits, puffbacks, flamingoes, hadadas, African spoonbills, and a host of other birds roosting, flitting and coasting over Nairobi, Kenya. Their enthusiasm for ornithology rubs off.
But in this Guide, the feathered friends aren't the main spectacle. Human rituals -- particularly mating -- are. Obligatory preening, bravado, and plotting ensue as unassuming "Small Brown Job" Mr. Malik faces off with Harry Khan, a wealthy, flamboyant flamingo type, for the privilege of asking Rose MacDonald Mbikwa, the Scottish-born widow of a Kenyan, to the prestigious Hunt Club Ball.
Honest Mr. Malik wouldn't dream of cheating on the wager to see who can spot the greatest number of different bird species in a week, even when, by chapter 25, the tally stands at Khan, 108 species, and Malik, 49. Khan, willing to throw some money around for victory, hires two Australians to guide him and takes day trips to Mount Kenya and other bird-rich locations. Mr. Malik (as he's referred to throughout the novel) sticks unimaginatively closer to home, at least initially. Still, setbacks beset him. For instance, his car and his bird list notebook are stolen. Then, when he finally ventures farther afield, he must, with heart in mouth, flee threatening Somali gunmen. Nevertheless, this rather bumbling widower finds an oasis of bird life by chapter 34. Can Mr. Malik, sometimes seeming too much the innocent, overtake his rival? Will the wager even matter? Or will the female of the species have her own ideas?
A Guide to the Birds of East Africa invites comparison with Alexander McCall Smith's Ladies Detective Agency series about Botswana, but it feathers its own nest. Its narrator is a bit of a wag, arguably another continent's Mark Twain. He is unidentified but can be interpreted as a fictional version of Drayson. Among other things, he supplies back stories for the characters and takes swipes at many of the social and political contrivances, customs, and conventions of Kenya's multi-cultural population. Drayson prods, with wit, the vulnerabilities he probably witnessed or was told about when he lived in Nairobi for two years.
This novel offers a laid-back tale that meanders some -- a farting bet, anyone? It follows the improbable but amusing adventures of a man shyly in love who doesn't quite know how to convey his feelings to the lady in question. And all the while, it slyly educates the reader about the social, racial, cultural, political, and what-have-you undercurrents in this African nation. Oh, and it not only draws wryly astute analogies between human beings and birds but it allows the reader to be almost as tickled as Mr. Malik when he sights a purple backed sunbird, a malachite kingfisher, or a hoopoe "with its long curved beak and clown's crest." The hoopoe "didn't seem at all afraid...Don't worry the bird seemed to be saying." Is that good advice? Will it all work out for Mr. Malik? Find out for yourself....
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