A confused and rambling mess of thoughts on the environment with no real substance
1.5/5
Simon Barnes is a well known sports writer for the times and has written a few pieces for travel magazines. On the back of that, Barnes wrote several books on nature (including How to be a bad birdwatcher), a subject which he is not qualified to speak about by any measure. By his own admission in this book, Barnes admits that he didn't care about nature for the first 40 years of his life- you as a reader start to wonder why he is lecturing you on how to enjoy and appreciate nature for yourself.
Written through over 150 arbitrarily ordered short chapters, which don't appear to focus on any particular subject or theme, How to Be Wild delivers several throwaway musings and thoughts on nature that attempt to be poetic and profound, a style for which is author is best known. Unfortunately Barnes' pretentious writing fails to inform and excite the reader of many of the fascinating phenomenon in nature, and severely falls short of it's goal of advising how best to live a more wild life. It is unclear whether the several factual errors in this book show it's age (10 years) or the incompetence of the author!
This book feels as if it is written by someone with little actual care or enthusiasm for the natural world, and written for people who 'like the idea' of living on the wild side, but would rather read about it than do it for themselves! Despite having a few interesting tidbits of knowledge between pages of pretentious garbage, those wishing to delve into the wonders of nature should look elsewhere.