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Summary and Reviews of The Bird Skinner by Alice Greenway

The Bird Skinner by Alice Greenway

The Bird Skinner

by Alice Greenway
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  • First Published:
  • Jan 7, 2014, 320 pages
  • Paperback:
  • Nov 2014, 336 pages
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About This Book

Book Summary

Written in lush, lyrical prose - rich in island detail, redolent of Maine in summer and of the Pacific -The Bird Skinner is wise and wrenching, an unforgettable masterwork from an extraordinarily skillful novelist.

Jim Kennoway was once an esteemed member of the ornithology department at the Museum of Natural History in New York, collecting and skinning birds as specimens. Slowing down from a hard-lived life and a recent leg amputation, Jim retreats to an island in Maine: to drink, smoke, and to be left alone. As a young man he worked for Naval Intelligence during World War II in the Solomon Islands. While spying on Japanese shipping from behind enemy lines, Jim befriended Tosca, a young islander who worked with him as a scout. Now, thirty years later, Tosca has sent his daughter Cadillac to stay with Jim in the weeks before she begins premedical studies at Yale. She arrives to Jim's consternation, yet she will capture his heart and the hearts of everyone she meets, irrevocably changing their lives.

Written in lush, lyrical prose - rich in island detail, redolent of Maine in summer and of the Pacific -The Bird Skinner is wise and wrenching, an unforgettable masterwork from an extraordinarily skillful novelist.

Fox Island, Penobscot Bay, Maine, July 1973

Jim wedges the chair into the kitchen doorway, forcing the screen door open, lights his third or fourth cigarette. The doctors told him not to. Cut down on the drink, right down, and cut out the smoking altogether. To hell with that. He lost the leg anyhow.

The nicotine leaves him edgy and overly alert. An irascibility that's hard to burn off, stuck as he is in a wheelchair. He could use a drink is the truth of it but he'll hold off for now. It's the least he can do—not meet the girl half drunk.

Go easy. Go easy, he mutters aloud. Shutting his eyes, he wills himself to concentrate on birdcalls. A habit honed since he was a boy. A surefire way of keeping emotions at bay, or safely battened down, which is how he likes them. Gulls—the leitmotif of the island, laughing or crying, however you want to take it. The scolding of a blue jay. The sharp chirrup of a robin. Crows—down by Stillman's place ...

Please be aware that this discussion guide will contain spoilers!
  1. The anchor of The Bird Skinner is the title figure, Jim. What makes this misanthropic man an endearing character? Why do the other characters care about him?
  2. Why is Jim so resistant to Cadillac's arrival? What are his excuses? Are they understandable?
  3. Discuss how Jim has set himself apart throughout his life. In what ways has he always been an outcast and recluse, from childhood through old age?
  4. With what curse does Jim's grandfather haunt him? How does this curse manifest in Jim's relationship with Fergus?
  5. Despite Jim's flaws as a father, Fergus cares for and looks after him. Talk about how their roles as father and son change throughout the story.
  6. Discuss Jim's identification with Long John Silver in ...
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Reviews

BookBrowse Review

BookBrowse

Readers of The Bird Skinner may be left, as Jim says of his friendship with Tosca, "slightly dazed by how all the pieces fit together." But fit together they do, in a sophisticated narrative that blends seemingly irreconcilable times, places, and people into one lush and troubling whole...continued

Full Review Members Only (902 words)

(Reviewed by Rebecca Foster).

Media Reviews

New York Times Book Review
Bracing . . . Greenway’s thrilling evocation of young love . . . is as fresh as it is heartbreaking. The Bird Skinner knows we are animals, all of us. The natural world is everywhere—and despite undeniable beauty, it's rarely pretty

Washington Post
Sensitively written and gently understanding of human frailty. . . . Greenway’s rapturous prose and warm empathy assert that there is beauty to be found in even the unhappiest lives.

Booklist
Rich in sensual detail and heartbreaking in its portrait of a life consumed by regret.

Kirkus Reviews
Greenway’s limpid, poetic prose; her richly nuanced portrait of a nicely varied cast of characters on both Fox and Manhattan islands; and her evocative depiction of natural landscapes . . . [is] sensitive and finely written.

Publishers Weekly
Gifted at evoking places in the past, Greenway is at her most poignant in moments when outsiders and natives, from hot climates and cold, come face to face, attempting to connect across geographic, cultural, emotional, and psychological divides.

Author Blurb Frances FitzGerald, author of Fire in the Lake: The Vietnamese and the Americans in Vietnam
Spirited and moving... Greenway has a marvelous sense of place and history. Her evocation of the war in the Solomons, and her description of the island in Maine, are pitch-perfect.

Author Blurb Helen Dunmore, author of The Siege
Greenway creates intensely believable characters who come from other places and other times. She captures so well the unsleeping tragedies of the past, and how these bear in upon the present.

Author Blurb Jim Harrison, author of The River Swimmer
A fascinating novel with the peculiar combination of ornithology and World War II in the South Pacific, birds and death, and the survivors who not so much survive as endure. This is a rich stew pervaded by fine story telling.

Reader Reviews

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Beyond the Book



The Solomon Islands

The little-known Solomon Islands are a particularly unusual frame of reference for a work of contemporary fiction. By contrasting New England and Oceania, The Bird Skinner sheds light on a fairly obscure culture.

The Solomon Islands

The Solomon Islands is an archipelago of about 900 islands located in Melanesia, a subregion of Oceania in the western Pacific. Most of the islands are mountainous due to volcanic activity, others are often tiny low lying sandy atolls. The closest land masses are Papua New Guinea and Australia to the west. It is believed that Papuans first settled on the Solomon Islands about 30,000 years ago. A new round of immigration from Southeast Asia in the 5th century BCE brought new languages as well as agricultural and boat-building...

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Read-Alikes

Read-Alikes Full readalike results are for members only

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