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Alfie and Me
- What Owls Know, What Humans Believe
- Narrated by: Carl Safina
- Length: 12 hrs and 19 mins
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Publisher's summary
When ecologist Carl Safina and his wife, Patricia, took in a near-death baby owl, they expected that, like other wild orphans they'd rescued, she'd be a temporary presence. But Alfie's feathers were not growing correctly, requiring prolonged care. As Alfie grew and gained strength, she became a part of the family, joining a menagerie of dogs and chickens and making a home for herself in the backyard.
Alfie & Me is the story of the remarkable impact this little owl would have on their lives. The continuing bond of trust following her freedom—and her raising of her own wild brood—coincided with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, a year in which Carl and Patricia were forced to spend time at home without the normal obligations of work and travel. Witnessing all the fine details of their feathered friend's life offered Carl and Patricia a view of existence from Alfie's perspective.
One can travel the world and go nowhere; one can be stuck keeping the faith at home and discover a new world. Safina's relationship with an owl made him want to better understand how people have viewed humanity's relationship with nature across cultures and throughout history. Interwoven with Safina's keen observations, insight, and reflections, Alfie & Me is a work of profound beauties and magical timing harbored within one upended year.
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Overall
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Some people insist that culture is strictly a human feat. What are they afraid of? This book looks into three cultures of other-than-human beings in some of Earth's remaining wild places. It shows how if you're a sperm whale, a scarlet macaw, or a chimpanzee, you too experience your life with the understanding that you are an individual in a particular community. You too are who you are not by genes alone; your culture is a second form of inheritance. And your culture, too, changes and evolves.
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It all sinks in over the story—highly recommend
- By Knitting Fisherman on 06-13-20
By: Carl Safina
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What an Owl Knows
- The New Science of the World's Most Enigmatic Birds
- By: Jennifer Ackerman
- Narrated by: Jennifer Ackerman
- Length: 9 hrs and 14 mins
- Unabridged
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For millennia, owls have captivated and intrigued us. Our fascination with these mysterious birds was first documented more than thirty thousand years ago in the Chauvet Cave paintings in southern France. With their forward gaze and quiet flight, owls are often a symbol of wisdom, knowledge, and foresight. But what does an owl really know? And what do we really know about owls? Jennifer Ackerman illuminates the rich biology and natural history of these birds and reveals remarkable new scientific discoveries about their brains and behavior.
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Well researched work
- By Rubin on 11-08-23
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Voyage of the Turtle
- By: Carl Safina
- Narrated by: David Drummond
- Length: 16 hrs and 31 mins
- Unabridged
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As Carl Safina's compelling natural-history adventure makes clear, the fate of the leatherback turtle is in our hands. The distressing decline of these ancient sea turtles in Pacific waters and their surprising recovery in the Atlantic illuminate the results - both positive and negative - of our interventions and the lessons that can be applied, globally, to restore the oceans and their creatures. We accompany award-winning natural-history expert Safina and his colleagues as they track leatherbacks across the world's oceans and onto remote beaches of every continent.
By: Carl Safina
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Eye of the Albatross
- Visions of Hope and Survival
- By: Carl Safina
- Narrated by: Todd McLaren
- Length: 16 hrs and 24 mins
- Unabridged
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Eye of the Albatross takes us soaring to locales where whales, sea turtles, penguins, and shearwaters flourish in their own quotidian rhythms. Carl Safina’s guide and inspiration is an albatross he calls Amelia, whose life and far-flung flights he describes in fascinating detail. Interwoven with recollections of whalers and famous explorers, Eye of the Albatross probes the unmistakable environmental impact of the encounters between man and marine life.
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Birds & the sea
- By Hari on 07-21-16
By: Carl Safina
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The Age of Deer
- Trouble and Kinship with Our Wild Neighbors
- By: Erika Howsare
- Narrated by: Erika Howsare
- Length: 11 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
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Deer have been an important part of the world that humans occupy for millennia. They're one of the only large animals that can thrive in our presence. In the twenty-first century, our relationship is full of contradictions: We hunt and protect them, we cull them from suburbs while making them an icon of wilderness, we see them both as victims and as pests. But there is no doubt that we have a connection to deer: in mythology and story, in ecosystems biological and digital, in cities and in forests.
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buy the physical copy
- By Jorge Perez on 03-01-24
By: Erika Howsare
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Children of the Northern Forest
- Wild New England's History from Glaciers to Global Warming
- By: Jamie Sayen
- Narrated by: Stephen Caffrey
- Length: 11 hrs and 31 mins
- Unabridged
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Jamie Sayen approaches the story of northern New England's undeveloped forests from the viewpoints of the previously unheard: the forest and the nonhuman species it sustains, the First Peoples, and, in more recent times, the disenfranchised human voices of the forest, including those of loggers, mill workers, and citizens who, like Henry David Thoreau, wish to speak a kind word for nature.
By: Jamie Sayen
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The View From Lazy Point
- By: Carl Safina
- Narrated by: Todd McLaren
- Length: 15 hrs and 11 mins
- Unabridged
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Beginning in his kayak in his home waters of eastern Long Island, Carl Safina's The View from Lazy Point takes us through the four seasons to the four points of the compass, from the high Arctic south to Antarctica, across the warm belly of the tropics from the Caribbean to the west Pacific, then home again.
By: Carl Safina
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What It's Like to Be a Bird
- From Flying to Nesting, Eating to Singing - What Birds Are Doing, and Why (Sibley Guides)
- By: David Allen Sibley
- Narrated by: Evan Sibley
- Length: 7 hrs and 56 mins
- Unabridged
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In What It's Like to Be a Bird, David Sibley answers the most frequently asked questions about the birds we see most often. This special brand-new audio edition is geared as much to nonbirders as it is to the out-and-out obsessed, covering more than 200 species. While its focus is on familiar backyard birds—blue jays, nuthatches, chickadees—it also examines certain species that can be fairly easily observed, such as the seashore-dwelling Atlantic puffin.
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Wonderfully narrated. The perfect companion to the book
- By Amy T on 09-14-22
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Dream
- The Art and Science of Slumber
- By: Scott Carney
- Narrated by: Scott Carney
- Length: 3 hrs and 31 mins
- Unabridged
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Why do so many of us have trouble falling asleep? Why do our thoughts spin in wild directions after dark? More important: why do we dream? In this groundbreaking new book, investigative journalist and anthropologist Scott Carney sets out to discover how the sleeping world reverberates in the waking one. Unlock the power of the immune system at the same time you dig deeply into the source of creativity. Discover the evolutionary process that forges both memory and emotions.
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Are we ever not dreaming?
- By Chaos on 01-10-24
By: Scott Carney
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Mama's Last Hug
- Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us About Ourselves
- By: Frans de Waal
- Narrated by: L. J. Ganser
- Length: 10 hrs and 38 mins
- Unabridged
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Mama's Last Hug opens with the dramatic farewell between Mama, a dying 59-year-old chimpanzee matriarch, and biologist Jan Van Hooff. This heartfelt final meeting of two longtime friends offers a window into how deep and instantly recognizable these bonds can be. So begins Frans de Waal's whirlwind tour of new ideas and findings about animal emotions, based on his renowned studies of the social and emotional lives of chimpanzees, bonobos, and other primates.
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SO TRUE!
- By Dana Eichert on 03-15-19
By: Frans de Waal
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Flight Paths
- How a Passionate and Quirky Group of Pioneering Scientists Solved the Mystery of Bird Migration
- By: Rebecca Heisman
- Narrated by: Allyson Ryan
- Length: 8 hrs and 32 mins
- Unabridged
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For the past century, scientists and naturalists have been steadily unravelling the secrets of bird migration. How and why birds navigate the skies, traveling from continent to continent—flying thousands of miles across the earth each fall and spring—has continually fascinated the human imagination, but only recently have we been able to fully understand these amazing journeys.
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BIRDS!
- By Dan on 04-28-24
By: Rebecca Heisman
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Of Time and Turtles
- Mending the World, Shell by Shattered Shell
- By: Sy Montgomery
- Narrated by: Sy Montgomery
- Length: 10 hrs and 33 mins
- Unabridged
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When acclaimed naturalist Sy Montgomery and wildlife artist Matt Patterson arrive at Turtle Rescue League, they are greeted by hundreds of turtles recovering from injury and illness. Endangered by cars and highways, pollution and poachers, these turtles—with wounds so severe that even veterinarians would have dismissed them as fatal—are given a second chance at life. The League’s founders, Natasha and Alexxia, live by one motto: Never give up on a turtle.
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Heartwarming
- By nathan 0 on 09-26-23
By: Sy Montgomery
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The Blue Machine
- How the Ocean Works
- By: Helen Czerski
- Narrated by: Helen Czerski
- Length: 14 hrs and 51 mins
- Unabridged
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All of Earth’s oceans, from the equator to the poles, are a single engine powered by sunlight, driving huge flows of energy, water, life, and raw materials. In The Blue Machine, physicist and oceanographer Helen Czerski illustrates the mechanisms behind this defining feature of our planet, voyaging from the depths of the ocean floor to tropical coral reefs, estuaries that feed into shallow coastal seas, and Arctic ice floes. Timely, elegant, and passionately argued, The Blue Machine presents a fresh perspective on what it means to be a citizen of an ocean planet.
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Wonderful knowledge locked into much detail
- By S Bell on 11-07-23
By: Helen Czerski
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The Genius of Birds
- By: Jennifer Ackerman
- Narrated by: Margaret Strom
- Length: 11 hrs and 54 mins
- Unabridged
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Birds are astonishingly intelligent creatures. In fact, according to revolutionary new research, some birds rival primates and even humans in their remarkable forms of intelligence. Like humans, many birds have enormous brains relative to their size. Although small, bird brains are packed with neurons that allow them to punch well above their weight.
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What a disappointment!
- By S. Benedict on 07-05-16
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How Memory Works and Why Your Brain Remembers Wrong
- By: Gabrielle F. Principe, The Great Courses
- Narrated by: Gabrielle F. Principe
- Length: 5 hrs and 47 mins
- Original Recording
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“Who are you?” Chances are you’d answer this question by describing the highlights of your personality and life experiences. But if you’d been asked this same question yesterday, you might have responded with a slightly different description. Does that mean you are a particular person today but were a different person yesterday? And what about tomorrow? Welcome to the slippery, shape-shifting nature of memory. As Professor Gabrielle Principe reveals, “you” are the conglomeration of the often-unreliable information your brain decides to feed you at any given moment.
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Outstanding
- By Natasha on 01-20-24
By: Gabrielle F. Principe, and others
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The Private Lives of Public Birds
- Learning to Listen to the Birds Where We Live
- By: Jack Gedney
- Narrated by: Jonathan Todd Ross
- Length: 6 hrs and 15 mins
- Unabridged
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Each essay illuminates the life of a single species and its relationship to humans, and how these species can help us understand birds in general. A dedicated birdwatcher and teacher, Gedney finds wonder not only in the speed and glistening beauty of the Anna's hummingbird, but also in her nest building. He acclaims the turkey vulture's and red-tailed hawk's roles in our ecosystem, and he venerates the inimitable California scrub jay's work planting acorns.
By: Jack Gedney
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The Hidden Life of Garden Birds
- The Unseen Drama Behind Everyday Survival
- By: Dominic Couzens
- Narrated by: Dominic Couzens
- Length: 7 hrs and 1 min
- Unabridged
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Did you know that woodpeckers are capable of learning simple codes? Hooded crows can form connections with humans? A jay's call affects the behaviour of surrounding squirrels? All these fascinating bird activities and more are revealed in The Hidden Life of Garden Birds. Unusual feeding behaviour is just the tip of the iceberg. From territorial conflict and strange relationships with man, to breeding and nesting oddities, this book exposes all the drama behind garden birds' everyday survival - making it the perfect gift for birdwatchers.
By: Dominic Couzens
What listeners say about Alfie and Me
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Mary Lane
- 05-09-24
Our need to recognize our interconnectedness with all of nature
The author's story of the owls and our need to see differently our relationship with all of nature was compelling.
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- Kaysi12
- 02-16-24
One of the very best
I have always enjoyed writings by Carl Safina, who I think is one of the very best nature writers of all time, and to me this was one of the best of his works.
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- Management
- 05-03-24
Resilience of owls
This story takes place and was possible due to the increased time at home because of the pandemic lockdowns. The main character is an owl that was rescued it’s rescuers named Alfie. It follows Alfie from youth thru maturity.
Pros: learning about this owl and her mate and owlets, and their interactions with their rescuers.
Cons: an exorbitant amount of philosophizing, probably expected from a college professor/author.
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- Helen Lloyd
- 05-04-24
So many quotes
Just hard to keep track of so many quotes. Liked the story path of the owl.
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