Reviews

The Snow Geese by William Fiennes

smarkies's review against another edition

Go to review page

informative reflective slow-paced

3.0

fallchicken's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

This isn't really about snow geese but about the author's journey following a childhood memory (Gallico's [b:The Snow Goose|529241|The Snow Goose (Essential.penguin)|Paul Gallico|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1175559841s/529241.jpg|726049]). The story of a journey and the author's meditations on home. Some nice observations and writing.

evareading's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous reflective sad slow-paced

4.0

georgiarybanks's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous hopeful informative inspiring reflective relaxing slow-paced

3.75

sarahthornton's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Too much about people, not enough about geese.

dianadawn's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Viaje, añoranza y aves. Recomiendo esta novela a cualquier amante de las aves, o la naturaleza en general. Si buscas una lectura tranquila, y te apetece darte una vuelta recorriendo el Norte de América de Texas a la isla de Baffin, ¡esta podría ser una buena opción como siguiente lectura!

Al ser una novela autobiográfica se hace difícil ponerle una puntuación. Sin embargo, estilos de la narración y algunos aspectos más concretos en cuanto al formato me han ayudado a ponerle una bastante acertada a lo que me ha parecido el libro. Para empezar, en cuanto a los aspectos negativos, la gran cantidad de comparaciones usadas permite al lector ponerle color a los eventos, pero también provoca cierta lentitud y puede resultar algo pesada de leer. Además, teniendo en cuenta que está escrito en primera persona, la descripción se centra más en lo que ocurre alrededor y no tanto en lo que el narrador siente o cómo le afecta aquello que está viviendo o haciendo. Esto último provoca en el lector cierta distancia respecto al narrador (o al menos, desde mi lectura, yo no he podido llegar a connectar tanto con Fiennes). Siguiendo con los aspectos negativos de la novela, me han resultado un tanto pobres los diálogos y con falta de edición.

He de confesar que a pesar de la pobreza (o exceso) que he encontrado en el formato, también han habido aspectos positivos a lo largo de la novela que me gustaría resaltar. Aunque es cierto que la abundancia de comparaciones ralentiza la lectura, también es cierto que me han fascinado la mayoría de ellas (sobretodo cuando comparaba acciones físicas con lenguaje musical). Algo que también he de confesar que me ha encantado es el conjunto de referencias etimológicas, sobre terminología ornitóloga o sobre la nostalgia; y también las pequeñas curiosidades sobre ciertas aves migratorias que Fiennes ha ido recopilando y conociendo a lo largo de su trayecto por Norteamérica.

William Fiennes ha hecho una rica recopilación de esa palpitante experiencia por las zonas nivales que hizo, tras una larga enfermedad, y que le permitió avistar las aves como nunca hubiese imaginado. Un largo, pero GRAN viaje migratorio al GRAN NORTE.

P. D.: Si decidís leer este libro, recomiendo muy encarecidamente que leáis de antemano o paralelamente la novela (cuya referencia sale constantemente en este libro) de Paul Gallico, La gansa blanca.

helenar's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous informative inspiring relaxing slow-paced

4.5

This was a wonderful escapism in the current pandemic situation. The descriptions of both nature and the many unusual characters that the author meets and gets to know on his travels make you feel as if you are there. I liked the theme of homesickness and the history of its past diagnosis as a medical condition that he also gave time to and how his return home was as exhilarating and joyous as his first sightings of the snow geese and maybe brought about somewhat by the feeling of the geese returning home after their long migration. There is a definite thread linking the return of these birds each year to our own innate needs of returning to the familiarity of our homes. His description of the stark contrast of his own reasons for being on Baffin Island observing the geese against the residents need for them as a food resource in a climate where growing food is nigh on impossible and even transporting it there a challenge is also well illustrated in a compassionate manner. All in all it was lovely comforting read.

halfmanhalfbook's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This book was inspired by Fiennes read in of The Snow Goose when younger, and after a period in hospital, when he had a burning longing to return home to familiar and comforting surroundings. He wondered what drove the Snow goose to travel all across America, from Texas to Alaska.

Part travel book and part natural history, Fiennes follows the route that the geese take by coach, meeting a series of characters along the way. At each point that the geese move is determined by the conditions, so occasionally he gets ahead of them, and sees them arrive. In one location he is asked to house sit at one point by someone he has just met and goes out to the place where thy feed and watches them arrive.

It is a beautifully written book, and effortless to read. He successfully manages to link his longing to retuning home with the journey of the snow gooze and them instinctive drive to travel huge distances. Well worth reading.

wtb_michael's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

I'd never heard of this before one of my favourite booksellers raved about it to me and it's immediately become one of my absolute favourites.

It tells the story of the author's attempt to follow along with the snow goose migration, from the Gulf of Mexico up to the frozen north of Canada. The nature writing is stunning, glorious - the awe-inspiring sight of tens of thousands of migrating geese is vividly drawn. The landscapes too are incredible, especially as the journey moves further and further north.

But even more stunning are Fiennes' portraits of the odd people he meets on the journey - hunters, train obsessives, birders and more. There are broad themes too about the desire for home, about balancing the excitement of the new against the comforts of the familiar. It's a really wonderful work (and the photo on the front is

jennifer's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

A beautifully written meditation on what home means and one man's journey to define it following a serious illness, told through the lens of a natural history book on the migration of snow geese. Somehow it manages at the same time to be one of the more compelling American road trip memoirs I've read. I love the detours the book takes into the etymology of nostalgia and homesickness. The prose is of a particular variety of precision and care that requires equal care in reading. In lesser hands such care could have been tedious, but Fiennes manages to make it a tool of transcendence.