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The Life-Affirming Magic of Birds: and the extraordinary things they can teach us

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Everyone has a bird story. It may just be a brief encounter with a friendly Robin, a Wood pigeon sitting on your windowsill, or a rare vagrant species spotted in an unexpected place. Join Charlie Bingham as she travels the length and breadth of the UK from rolling countryside to busy city centres searching for Oystercatchers on rooftops and Peregrines on cathedral spires. In sharing her bird stories, she will help you to discover yours.

Charlie Bingham will show you how birds from far-flung parts of the globe use the UK as their meeting point, allowing you to experience the sights and sounds that have touched every corner of the globe and are now available to you on your doorstep, whether that be a busy city centre or a coastal cliff.

Birds are a way to engage with nature that is accessible to all who want to experience it. If you can use any of your senses (apart from taste—you can’t just lick a bird), then you can be ‘a birder.’ If you can hear the beatboxing starling from the tree outside your garden, you can be a birder. If you can see the flash of navy plumage as a swallow swoops above you as you lay on the grass, you can be a birder. If you can feel the branches of the hedgerows that open their doors to the roosting flock of sparrows each night, then you can be a birder.

The Life-Affirming Magic of Birds will show you an alternative way to appreciate nature and, through the twelve lessons, you will see the power that nature has to help us through turbulence. For years, we have been told to look down at our feet on the earth in order to calm and ground ourselves, but for Charlie, it’s quite the opposite. Whether you're experiencing grief, struggling with mental health, or if you’ve ever struggled to find the motivation to get through the daily grind, this book reveals how birds, and the simple act of noticing nature, can guide us through the most challenging times.

This is a book that will make you look up.

272 pages, Hardcover

Published June 10, 2025

7 people are currently reading
102 people want to read

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Megan.
77 reviews6 followers
February 4, 2025
I often find myself scrolling through the nature books ‘coming soon’ pages on the Waterstones website, looking for upcoming books to get excited about, and a few months ago I stumbled across The Life-Affirming Magic of Birds. Charlie is a fellow bird nerd on social media, and we’ve bumped into one another at a few nature reserves and wildlife events, so I was delighted to hear she had a book coming out.

The publisher was lovely enough to send me through an advanced copy and I adored it. I’m partial to nature writing where I can really put myself into the author’s shoes - where I can imagine going where they’ve been, seeing what they’ve seen. I didn’t have to do too much imagining here - through the book, Charlie visits a few of my favourite nature spots. Reading about her wildlife encounters in these places knowing that I have had my own in the same spots gives a deeper connection to the book. A section on the peregrines of York Minster? Yes please! Gannets at Bempton? Sign me up.

Through the book, Charlie is incredibly vulnerable and open about some of the struggles that life has thrown her way - at once incredibly personal and entirely relatable. The thread connecting everything is the magic moments that wildlife, and in particular birds, have given her in recent years.

It is more important than ever that more people forge a love for our natural world and the creatures that share it with us - as is so often said, people won’t protect things that they don’t care about. Charlie admits she isn’t a naturalist, she has no qualifications in this field, but what she has is an open mind and an open heart, into which birds regularly fly (in the words of Robert Macfarlane and Johnny Flynn… ‘the birds have my heart, and they won’t give it back to me’).

Whether you’re a fully fledged birder, or just fond of a robin or two - you will be moved by Charlie’s love of birds. Take a look outside and see what you can see. (Then pre-order this book - you won’t regret it!)
Profile Image for LJ.
Author 12 books14 followers
April 27, 2025
'Nature doesn't have to be remote and wild to be spectacular; it's always there, and by learning to notice what is around us, we open ourselves up to a whole world that moves around us...'

This book has 12 chapters focused on 12 different birds and what Bingham has learnt from each one. I wish it had more illustrations and photos, but if you love birds, you won't fail to relate to these stories of daily encounters. I love the description of starlings, as beautiful as I think they are and the passage devoted to pied wagtails which are one of my favourites. Bingham shares my sentiments about parakeets and pigeons too.

I wholeheartedly agree with the message of this book - wherever you are, birds bring such joy and reflection. Bingham brings this across through all kinds of circumstances and places across the UK. Anyone with a hint of curiosity about birds, especially in an urban setting, will learn something (related and intriguing facts are dropped throughout) or relate to this personal admiration of bird kind.
200 reviews
April 17, 2025
This book is just a little slice of wonder. Half nature book, half personal memoir, all of Charlie's stories tell of a personal journey of discovery and healing - they are raw, charming, witty and delightfully written. She brings readers into her brain to experience the joy of seeing a murmuration, or hearing a curlew and with every story I got a secondhand thrill hearing about her encounters.

This book is the perfect read for anyone who has ever felt like nature isn't for them, that they don't know enough, or they're not the 'right' kind of person to be in nature. It's an open-armed welcome to the nature nerd club.

But more than that, as a new parent, for me this read as a manual, a prescription of what is truly important to teach my daughter. Maths and chemistry aren't essential, but the 12 lessons in this book feel like they are - essential to help keep the wonder alive, and raise happy, connected kids. I'm grateful to Charlie for sharing them with us.
Profile Image for Morgan Holdsworth.
220 reviews
July 23, 2025
really neat little read! i enjoyed how its half an autobiography and half bird facts - if you’re looking for an optimistic reminder of the comfort of nature look no further
20 reviews
September 30, 2025
I have been a birder in Northeast Ohio since about 2012. I saw this book on our local library’s new book shelf this summer. After reading a short bit without really paying attention I thought this was going to be a fluffy book without much depth. I put it back. Then, I decided that I hadn't given it a chance. Besides, I really liked the cover art and chapter artwork inside. When I sat down and actually read it, I really enjoyed it. I don't want to give away any spoilers. It's definitely worth reading whether you are an experienced birder, a naturalist or someone who doesn't have a clue about the natural world around.

Even though I haven't seen the specific species the author wrote about, I found that I could relate to a lot of the author's experiences about discovering the creatures around no matter where you are. I had a similar "wake up" experience with birds when I first started birding (and again with dragonflies during the pandemic): these beautiful creatures had been there all along. I had just never took time to look at/for them. And, like the author, I had a number of people introduce me to birds. And, like the author, now that I see things, I occasionally point things out to others when I am outside. Since I carry binoculars when I look for birds, people seem to just naturally ask "what are you seeing?".

I was touched by a number of the stories in this book. I especially enjoyed the one experience about the older man in Sefton Park in the chapter about herring gulls.

I think the author is lucky that she has the chance to share her wonder and enjoyment with her family. I hope her children never lose their wonder for and interest in the natural world.

This isn't an advanced birding book. But, I think it's an important book about the enjoyment of discovery, and the discovery of enjoyment of things that are already around you. And, there's a lot to be discovered in the natural world.
Profile Image for Jane.
883 reviews
June 25, 2025
Read, in part, while sitting on the deck of a log cabin in Cropton Forest with a backdrop of chiffchaff, blackcap, wren, and song thrush song. This seemed an appropriate setting to read this book about nature and life.

It is a study of 12 birds, each with a lesson, and combines information about the bird with personal reflections about the author and her family and how this bird has appeared in her life. Part memoir, part nature study. All accessible.

Those 12 birds and life lessons are:

Oystercatcher: Let nature guide you through adversity
Swift: You have the power to change a world
Starling: Look for the unexpected
Peregrine: Learn from those who are there to teach
Swallow: We aren't removed from nature, we don't own nature, we are nature
Gannet: Our fight or flight response needs a system upgrade
Herring Gull: Nature teaches us the power of resilience
Curlew: Never lose that sense of wonder
Goose: The world can be so much bigger when you let nature in
Rook: There is beauty in the everyday
Parakeet: Things change, that's guaranteed - it's up to you whether you choose to change with them
Pigeon: Open your eyes now to the magic that surrounds you
76 reviews
December 10, 2025
This is a lovely book that shows you how wonderful it can be to connect with the nature that is all around us. Charlie Bingham points out that she is no wildlife expert, but her enthusiasm for learning about birds and wildlife in general, is inspiring.
1 review
December 17, 2025
I like the concept of the book, and appreciated the attempt. But the writing style wasn't for me, a little too casual. Probably could have been a shorter book, with shorter and punchier vignettes that would've been more engaging.
189 reviews1 follower
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August 18, 2025
cheepy chirpy chirp said the rainbow coloured papier mache pigeon
Profile Image for phoebe.
27 reviews7 followers
September 21, 2025
loved this book! completely agree with the authors philosophy of enjoying the ‘mundane’ every day nature interactions. and highly agree with her love of the humble pigeon!!
Profile Image for Diana May.
13 reviews
November 10, 2025
Beautiful book with a beautiful message. Reading this book was like getting a hug for my soul ♥️
Profile Image for Sian Witch reads.
76 reviews2 followers
May 12, 2025
This was a nice read, the author is a real storyteller, and it shows, it was so nice to hear the bird story's they have collected in life .solid 4 out of 5 for me
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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