It’s my fantasy and it’s yours: Quit the job, say good-bye to the family, and bird. Just bird. It’s what I dream of every Monday morning. British birder Chris Gooddie, my new birding hero, not only dreamed the fantasy, he lived it. And, to give his dream year a little more oomph, he created a grand once-in-a-lifetime goal: to track down and see every pitta species in the world in one year. (That’s Pitta, people, not Antpitta, which is what I foolishly first envisioned, having never birded beyond the Americas.) This is what The Jewel Hunter is about, Chris Gooddie’s “mission” to see 32 pitta species in 12 months, trekking to Asia, Africa and Australia, sometimes with comrades, often on his own, usually crawling through jungle floors, drenched by torrential rains, in danger of leopard or snake or fish attack, desperate for a good beer, thirsty for decent tea. This is the birding adventure book supreme.

Gooddie gets the book off to a quick start by describing his love affair with pittas (“the ultimate forest prize”), and detailing his decision to give up a good career as sales director of an audio manufacturing company (“my life was out of whack”). It isn’t till his travels get under way that we learn, chapter by chapter, about the specific difficulties of locating and viewing pittas. The endangered Gurney’s Pitta is losing habitat due to deforestation. Black-faced Pitta is found only on one of the Solomon Islands (northwest of Australia). Schneider’s Pitta was thought to be extinct for over fifty years. So little is known about Green-breasted Pitta, that he cannot get a definite location for the bird, or a recording of its display call. (He does find out that some have recently been made when he arrives in Uganda, stupendous news). I get my own idea of the lunacy of Gooddie’s quest when I talk to a friend who has birded Asia and Africa. “I’m reading a book about a man who is doing a Pitta Big Year,” I say. He stares back at me, mouth open before exploding, “That’s insaaaane.”

Pittas, I’ve learned, are small, ground-dwelling rainforest birds, intricately patterned in jewel colors. A Gurney’s Pitta is pictured below, a photograph by Chris Gooddie of the bird that was his inspiration. Skulking masters of camouflage despite their bright colors, they challenge every birding technique. They may respond to a recording of their call once, show themselves for a few seconds, and not respond again for the whole day.  Gooddie claims that pittas have magic powers: “Despite their typically rather chubby frames, they are able to flatten themselves behind single blades of grass. They can travel through space-time without leaving a ripple in the continuum in a way that even Stephen Hawking could not begin to explain.” Gooddie describes his quest in terms of a contest of wills and strategy.  One must “out-think” the bird.

Each chapter of The Jewel Hunter reads like a mini-travel novel. Thankfully, stories of plane travel gone wrong are minimized. There is a lot more to tell: descriptions of remote villages, delicous exotic food, unusual exotic food, going hungry, preparations for treks into isolated jungle areas (does one buy Quaker Oats or a live chicken?), how guides and drivers are found and where they live and what their families and homes look like, birder friends who accompany him on some legs of his quest, and the quirky people he ends up sharing beers with, in bars in huts on stilts. Beer looms large in Gooddie’s daily routine, and much text is devoted to finding beer in the middle of rural Asia and evaluating its quality. If you want to travel the world birding and drinking beer, The Jewel Hunter is a must-buy.

Goodie writes beautifully about his pittas once he finds them. Here is a little bit of his depiction of the male Banded Pitta: “Broad stripes, crisply delineated above and below in black sweep back above the eyes. Primrose yellow at first, they deepen to a burnished orange that lights up the forest.” Once he finds and photographs (if he can) the target pitta, he pauses to savor his success and then proceeds to bird the hell out of the island or park or mountain, finding endemics and specialties, birds I’ve never heard of with names like Philipine Frogmouth, Malaysian Rail-Babblier, Rusty Laughingthrush, Great Argus. Some of his finds are the first documented records of the bird in that area or the first decent photograph of a little-known species.  If it were just the birds, I’d grab my bins and be on the next plane to Asia or Africa .  But, there are other things out there in the jungle, things like leeches. And mosquitos. And leeches. And pit vipers. And sun bears. And leeches. And getting lost without a GPS. It’s tough birding the rainforest on your own.

The Jewel Hunter belongs to a singular niche, the Big Year/Big Lifelist book. I enjoy these books tremendously, and I know other birders, some blogging here, who gobble them up. When I was starting to bird, Kenn Kaufman’s Kingbird Highway and Mark Obmascik’s The Big Year taught me the importance of strategic thinking and patience and being part of the birding community. Now that I’m a little further down the birding road, Big Year books are my “good read” of choice. The books work best when the birding is coupled with the human element. Kingbird Highway is a great read because it is also a classic story of a young man growing up. On the other hand, Phoebe Snetsinger’s memoir, Birding on Borrowed Time, becomes tedious because of her lack of emotional disclosure.

The Jewel Hunter can be frustrating in this respect. Gooddie’s yearning to see his pittas, so well described in the first chapter, often gets lost in the details of his travels. What are the consequences of birding almost non-stop for a year? There is a paragraph near the end where you get a clue; Gooddie mentions, almost off-handedly, that he has spent most of the past year alone, not talking or interacting with people. That comment jumped out at me with an almost electric shock. The chapter on Sri Lanka, where Gooddie combines a vacation with his girlfriend, largely invisible elsewhere in the book, with his search for Indian Pitta, is to my taste one of the best parts of the book. The Jewel Hunter is heavily laced with Gooddie’s particular brand of broad ironic humor, and I did enjoy that, but I would have traded about 10 percent for a little more insight into the unexpected outcomes of his experience.

Overall, I think 10,000 Birds readers would reading enjoy The Jewel Hunter. There is a surprising amount of suspense incorporated in the tale, reaching its apex when Gooddie flies to Sabah, East Malaysia with three old friends to find the “mythical” Giant Pitta. His humor is wicked funny, especially when pointed at birding itself. There is little factual material here about global conservation and protection, but that is not the book’s purpose. This is a travel adventure book. The urgency of preserving habitat is however ingrained in every chapter.

The Jewel Hunter is illustrated with 19 black-and-white maps, each showing the route and target pitta. There are five photographic inserts, over 100 pictures of some of the more notable birds and of traveling companions and guides. The photos I looked at the most, over and over, were those in a section entitled “The Treasure Chest”, the photographs taken in the field of all the pittas seen (that could be photographed) in the order seen. “All photos were taken by the author and were the best I could obtain under trying conditions,” Gooddie writes. This is true. Some are fairly good, some blurry and dark. I was hoping for better visual evidence that these birds are “the most beautiful genus of birds in the known universe” and eventually found Pittas World. This is Gooddie’s web site, the host of his original travel blogs and a platform for pitta photographs, video, and paintings by fortunate birders and talented artists.

The Jewel Hunter is published by WildGuides, a UK publishing company that specializes in photographic field guides, and which donates a percentage of profits from each book to a conservation organization, in this case, Birdlife International. You can buy the book fairly easily through online booksellers; look up the title in Amazon.com or Abebooks.com. The Book Depository, a British online bookseller that uses the Abebooks.com portal, charges $22.54, including shipping. And, good news! As I was finishing up this review, I discovered that Princeton University Press will be bringing out a U.S. edition of the book in the fall. (At the current time, information on pricing is not available.) There go my plans for a 10,000 Birds write-in campaign.

Pittas, a bird species I never heard of before reading this book, are cropping up more and more in the online birding world. Dale Forbes wrote that there are Only 5 pairs Gurney’s Pitta left in Thailand last June. His video of the most adorable blue-tail-wagging Gurney’s Pitta ever almost distracts the reader from the serious problem of habitat loss from logging. And, just last week James Currie posted about Finding Rainbow Pittas here, on 10,000 Birds, with great video footage. Hopefully, the publication of The Jewel Hunter in the United States will spur additional attention to this family and the need for rain forest preservation and ornithological study.

Meanwhile, don’t go birding in the rainforest alone. Let me know what your favorite Big Year book is. And where and how you will be doing your own special birding quest.

The Jewel Hunter
by Chris Goodie (text and pictures).
WILDGuides, 2010 (UK), 424p.
Softcover, ISBN 978-1-903657-16-4.
Forthcoming U.S. publication by Princeton Univ. Press, Fall 2012.

All photographs used in this article are courtesy of Chris Gooddie.

Written by Donna
Having been attached to books all her life, Donna Lynn Schulman is thrilled to be engaged in a passion that requires fealty to an information artifact called a “field guide.” Donna divides her birding time between Queens, New York, where she grew up, and central New Jersey, where she is on the adjunct faculty of a very large public university. Donna was a Library Journal book reviewer for 15 years, reviewing over 100 titles, and has also reviewed labor relations books and contributed articles on labor relations research to specialized journals and monographs. She wrote her first birding book reviews for the Queens County Bird Club’s News & Notes, which she formerly edited, and has also reviewed for the American Birding Associations' Birding magazine. Donna was recently pleased to talk about the top birding books of 2017 with Nate Swick for the ABA December podcast. When she is not birding or working on her nature photography, Donna travels to Florida, where she attempts to turn her young nephews into birders (so far, they are fisherman who send her photos of birds), to Los Angeles to visit her writer daughter and son-in-law, or somewhere wonderfully new and birdy. She also contemplates someday writing an article for her blog, Queensgirl.