Synopses & Reviews
A frustrated housewife sets out to see more bird species than anyone in history—and ends up risking her life again and again in the wildest places on earth. Phoebe Snetsinger had planned to be a scientist, but, like most women who got married in the 1950s, she ended up keeping house, with four kids and a home in the suburbs by her mid-thirties. Numb and isolated, she turned to bird-watching, but she soon tired of the birds near home and yearned to travel the world. Then her life took a crushing turn: At forty-nine, she was diagnosed with cancer and told that she had less than a year to live. Devastated, she began crisscrossing the globe, finding rare and spectacular birds that brought her to the heights of spiritual ecstasy. But as it turned out, she beat the cancer. She eventually went to more than a hundred countries, had frequent brushes with danger, became a hero in the birding world, and set a record for the most species seen. Life List is a powerful portrait of a woman who found refuge from societys expectations in a dangerous and soul-stirring obsession.
Review
“After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Swarthmore, Snetsinger stayed home with [her] four children, a dedicated but dissatisfied mother who might have served only as a cautionary tale for feminists if, one day in 1965, she hadnt encountered—in her own backyard—a Blackburnian Warbler. Snetsingers very ordinariness is part of the charm of
Life List, Olivia Gentiles provocative biography of an amateur ornithologist … That Snetsinger flew the coop was both a point of pride and a point of friction for her family, and Gentile does not cast judgment but simply describes what she sees. By documenting the tension between the obligation to others and the obligation to oneself, Gentile has written a book as much about the life of women as about a womans life.”
—Christian Science Monitor"Except for one thing, this book would rate as a great adventure novel and fictional psychological portrait, about a woman's obsession with bird-watching, its effect on her relationships with her husband and her four children, and the horrifying mishaps that she survived on each continent--until the last mishap. But the book isn't that great novel, because instead it's a great true story: the biography of Phoebe Snetsinger, who set the world record for bird species seen, after growing up in an era when American women weren't supposed to be competitive or have careers. Whether or not you pretend that it's a novel, you'll enjoy this powerful, moving story."—Jared Diamond, Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse
"[A] fascinating biography … a beautiful story of intellectual passion, love of nature, self-education, self-reinvention, and high adventure." —Slate
“Gentiles tale of a desperate but determined housewife with a passion for birds and adventure is engrossing, sharp, and affecting—a touching portrait and great read.” —Susan Orlean, author of The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup and The Orchid Thief
"Gentile tells Snetsinger's staggering story with clarity and verve. She reflects incisively on the shadow side of Snetsinger's quest—the perverse metamorphosis that turned a liberating passion into a devouring addiction, and perceptively elucidates and celebrates her accomplishments. A remarkable woman of tenacity, courage and transcendence, Snetsinger leaves a profound legacy, which will now be more fully appreciated and treasured thanks to Gentile's enthralling, provocative and inspiring biography." —Chicago Tribune
"After she heard about the Snetsinger legend, Gentile spent eight years pursuing Snetsinger as earnestly as Snetsinger pursued birds. The result is a wonderful book … Snetsinger's story is an adventure story, a psychological drama, a tragedy—and a triumph." —Minneapolis Star Tribune
"Riveting." —New Orleans Times-Picayune
“Compelling … [A] fascinating portrait of a woman torn between her obligations to her family and her life's passion: birds.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer “If you think … [Snetsinger] was a nice little lady who puttered around her back yard with binoculars, think again. Or better yet, read Life List, author and journalist Olivia Gentiles engaging and often exciting biography of Snetsinger … [Snetsinger was] a rare species well worth observing.” —St. Petersburg Times
“[Gentile does] a masterful job of investigating and vividly describing the personality, the extreme will to achieve, and the previously unknown life of Phoebe Snetsinger, the famous first lady of world birding ... absorbing and informative.” —Surfbirds“There was far more drama in Snetsinger's life than one would ever expect, and Olivia Gentile explores that life gracefully and convincingly... Gentile... places this brainy '50s mom nicely in the context of her times, while probing some of the fundamental questions raised by a hobby that turned into an obsession... A well-told story that carries you along as if on wings.”—Hartford Courant
“As much about meaningful living as about sparrows and chickadees, this intimate piece of reportage follows Phoebe Snetsinger, a housewife who in the 1960s takes refuge from banality in bird watching. Gradually sacrificing family ties and personal safety in her quest to see 8,000 birds before dying, she becomes a mythic figure among birders and leads Gentile to ruminate on how obsession with the natural world—so often touted as a scientists best asset—can be destructive as well as fulfilling.” —Seed “Life List is riveting ... the story of a suburban housewife and mother-of-four who became a legend in the testosterone-driven world of competitive birding is more than a biography. It raises themes that echo through all our lives, from the restriction of peoples roles by society, to questions of how best to spend ones days on Earth. Is pursuing a rare bird a trivial pursuit, or a chase worthy of respect? Ultimately, Life List asks what it means to live, and die, well.” —Nature
“This little book rolls over you like a steam train, slowly gaining speed and intensity, and clattering away in your mind long after you've finished it. With her straightforward, mostly nonjudgmental take, showing without telling, Olivia Gentile raises questions about Phoebe Snetsinger's choices that caused me to examine my own prejudices and boundaries in the pursuit of personal fulfillment. Its penetrating depth is the little surprise of a book that's gripping enough to be a novel, but tells nothing but the truth.” —Julie Zickefoose, Bird Watcher's Digest
“Life List is a great book ... Gentile demonstrates how birding can make us feel more alive.” —Montreal Gazette
“[Gentile's] enthusiasm in sharing her research is infectious ... [and her] knack for characterizing our feathered friends in a way that gives them some personality is matched by Rebecca Layton's illustrations, which are delightful.” —Philadelphia Inquirer
"Lively biography of intrepid, world-traveling ornithologist and cancer survivor Phoebe Snetsinger ... the prose delightfully conveys Gentiles engagement with her subject. Compassionate and comprehensive." —Kirkus Reviews
"[A] stirring account of an intriguing woman and the life she led." —Booklist
"Gentile's in-depth research and lovely prose is accompanied by 16 equally lovely watercolor bird drawings by Rebecca Layton."—Austin American Statesman"Diagnosed in her late 40s with incurable cancer and less than a year to live, [Phoebe Snetsinger] threw herself into birding, traveling worldwide, ignoring injury and danger to work on her life list for another 18 years ... Gentiles ambivalence, celebrating Snetsingers 'having lived so fully and with so much spirit' but noting that 'she had lost the capacity to take into account her family, her health and her safety,' adds a reflectiveness that Phoebe herself may have avoided in life." —Publishers Weekly “Snetsinger blended life as a Midwestern wife and mother with that of amateur birdwatcher until she received a terminal cancer diagnosis. Traveling some of the planets most remote and dangerous areas, she defied the odds and spent the next 18 years adding to the nearly 8,400 species on her 'life list,' a record that landed her in the Guinness Book of World Records and was only recently surpassed by two (male) British birders … [she was] as dedicated and focused as the best—dare it be said—Ivy League male scientist, a generous leader of her fellow birdwatchers and an advocate who brought attention to the worlds glorious birds and their shrinking habitat.”—BookPage
“Olivia Gentiles Life List is the remarkable story of Phoebe Snetsinger, a woman trapped by her life as homemaker, who found liberation in bird watching. Diagnosed with terminal cancer, she began traveling the world, not seeking a cure, but in search of rare birds—becoming a kind of ornithologist's heroine, and living another eighteen years. Gentiles journalistic temperament lures you in, whether you like birds or not (frankly I kind of hate them). The result is a beautifully revealing, sensitive exploration of Snetsingers singular obsession. The story slips under your skin—you cant help but keep reading.”—A.M. Homes, author of The Mistresss Daughter and This Book Will Save Your Life
"An intriguing portrait of one of the best-known birders of the modern age. I couldn't put it down!" —Peter Kaestner, Americas top living bird lister
"Phoebe Snetsinger lived a life of high adventure and exotic travel familiar to 19th century explorers - except that she was a 1960s Midwestern housewife who was supposed to be dying of cancer. How she became the world's most driven, globe-trotting birder, what she gained and what she sacrificed to see three-quarters of the Earth's birds, makes Life List an unusually compelling story." —Scott Weidensaul, author of the 2000 Pulitzer Prize finalist Living On the Wind and Of a Feather
“I am not a woman. I am not a birdwatcher, and I dont plan to become one. But nevertheless I found Life List to be a charming, heartening, fascinating, and altogether inspiring guide to living life (and facing death) with ones full attention.” —Kurt Andersen, host of NPRs Studio 360 and author of Heyday“Life List is an engaging saga of how a brave and complex woman defied cancer and gender in an epic quest to become the first person to see eight thousand bird species.” —Frank Gill, author of Ornithology and director and retired chief scientist of the National Audubon Society, and Sally Conyne, retired director of citizen science of the National Audubon Society
“Life List will easily attract bird people and the rest of us with its distinctive call. Gentile has written a graceful and very appealing book.”—Meg Wolitzer, author of The Ten-Year Nap and Sleepwalking
“Life List is an uncommon sort of book—a sincere, sometimes somber flight through the remarkable, storied life of one of birdings most tenacious and most erudite adherents. Gentile approaches her subject with equal parts sympathy and sobriety, capturing both the exhilaration and the costs of pursuing ones passion to the fullest." —Edward S. Brinkley, editor of North American Birds
“Olivia Gentile is a natural storyteller who has found a subject worthy of her remarkable talent. Life List is a book about birds and nature and also about obsession and choices and risk. Gentile has made an elegant, eloquent debut.”—Edward Dolnick, author of The Forgers Spell
“A phenomenal tale—beautifully told—of escape, risk, and obsession. Judicious [and] insightful.” —Patricia OToole, author of When Trumpets Call: Theodore Roosevelt After the White House
Review
“After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Swarthmore, Snetsinger stayed home with [her] four children, a dedicated but dissatisfied mother who might have served only as a cautionary tale for feminists if, one day in 1965, she hadnt encounteredin her own backyarda Blackburnian Warbler. Snetsingers very ordinariness is part of the charm of
Life List, Olivia Gentiles provocative biography of an amateur ornithologist … That Snetsinger flew the coop was both a point of pride and a point of friction for her family, and Gentile does not cast judgment but simply describes what she sees. By documenting the tension between the obligation to others and the obligation to oneself, Gentile has written a book as much about the life of women as about a womans life.”
Christian Science Monitor"Except for one thing, this book would rate as a great adventure novel and fictional psychological portrait, about a woman's obsession with bird-watching, its effect on her relationships with her husband and her four children, and the horrifying mishaps that she survived on each continent--until the last mishap. But the book isn't that great novel, because instead it's a great true story: the biography of Phoebe Snetsinger, who set the world record for bird species seen, after growing up in an era when American women weren't supposed to be competitive or have careers. Whether or not you pretend that it's a novel, you'll enjoy this powerful, moving story."Jared Diamond, Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse
"[A] fascinating biography … a beautiful story of intellectual passion, love of nature, self-education, self-reinvention, and high adventure." Slate
“Gentiles tale of a desperate but determined housewife with a passion for birds and adventure is engrossing, sharp, and affectinga touching portrait and great read.” Susan Orlean, author of The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup and The Orchid Thief
"Gentile tells Snetsinger's staggering story with clarity and verve. She reflects incisively on the shadow side of Snetsinger's questthe perverse metamorphosis that turned a liberating passion into a devouring addiction, and perceptively elucidates and celebrates her accomplishments. A remarkable woman of tenacity, courage and transcendence, Snetsinger leaves a profound legacy, which will now be more fully appreciated and treasured thanks to Gentile's enthralling, provocative and inspiring biography." Chicago Tribune
"After she heard about the Snetsinger legend, Gentile spent eight years pursuing Snetsinger as earnestly as Snetsinger pursued birds. The result is a wonderful book … Snetsinger's story is an adventure story, a psychological drama, a tragedyand a triumph." Minneapolis Star Tribune
"Riveting." New Orleans Times-Picayune
“Compelling … [A] fascinating portrait of a woman torn between her obligations to her family and her life's passion: birds.” Cleveland Plain Dealer “If you think … [Snetsinger] was a nice little lady who puttered around her back yard with binoculars, think again. Or better yet, read Life List, author and journalist Olivia Gentiles engaging and often exciting biography of Snetsinger … [Snetsinger was] a rare species well worth observing.” St. Petersburg Times
“[Gentile does] a masterful job of investigating and vividly describing the personality, the extreme will to achieve, and the previously unknown life of Phoebe Snetsinger, the famous first lady of world birding ... absorbing and informative.” Surfbirds“There was far more drama in Snetsinger's life than one would ever expect, and Olivia Gentile explores that life gracefully and convincingly... Gentile... places this brainy '50s mom nicely in the context of her times, while probing some of the fundamental questions raised by a hobby that turned into an obsession... A well-told story that carries you along as if on wings.”Hartford Courant
“As much about meaningful living as about sparrows and chickadees, this intimate piece of reportage follows Phoebe Snetsinger, a housewife who in the 1960s takes refuge from banality in bird watching. Gradually sacrificing family ties and personal safety in her quest to see 8,000 birds before dying, she becomes a mythic figure among birders and leads Gentile to ruminate on how obsession with the natural worldso often touted as a scientists best assetcan be destructive as well as fulfilling.” Seed “Life List is riveting ... the story of a suburban housewife and mother-of-four who became a legend in the testosterone-driven world of competitive birding is more than a biography. It raises themes that echo through all our lives, from the restriction of peoples roles by society, to questions of how best to spend ones days on Earth. Is pursuing a rare bird a trivial pursuit, or a chase worthy of respect? Ultimately, Life List asks what it means to live, and die, well.” Nature
“This little book rolls over you like a steam train, slowly gaining speed and intensity, and clattering away in your mind long after you've finished it. With her straightforward, mostly nonjudgmental take, showing without telling, Olivia Gentile raises questions about Phoebe Snetsinger's choices that caused me to examine my own prejudices and boundaries in the pursuit of personal fulfillment. Its penetrating depth is the little surprise of a book that's gripping enough to be a novel, but tells nothing but the truth.” Julie Zickefoose, Bird Watcher's Digest
“Life List is a great book ... Gentile demonstrates how birding can make us feel more alive.” Montreal Gazette
“[Gentile's] enthusiasm in sharing her research is infectious ... [and her] knack for characterizing our feathered friends in a way that gives them some personality is matched by Rebecca Layton's illustrations, which are delightful.” Philadelphia Inquirer
"Lively biography of intrepid, world-traveling ornithologist and cancer survivor Phoebe Snetsinger ... the prose delightfully conveys Gentiles engagement with her subject. Compassionate and comprehensive." Kirkus Reviews
"[A] stirring account of an intriguing woman and the life she led." Booklist
"Gentile's in-depth research and lovely prose is accompanied by 16 equally lovely watercolor bird drawings by Rebecca Layton."Austin American Statesman"Diagnosed in her late 40s with incurable cancer and less than a year to live, [Phoebe Snetsinger] threw herself into birding, traveling worldwide, ignoring injury and danger to work on her life list for another 18 years ... Gentiles ambivalence, celebrating Snetsingers 'having lived so fully and with so much spirit' but noting that 'she had lost the capacity to take into account her family, her health and her safety,' adds a reflectiveness that Phoebe herself may have avoided in life." Publishers
Review
“A phenomenal tale—beautifully told—of escape, risk, and obsession. Judicious [and] insightful.”—Patricia OToole, author of When Trumpets Call: Theodore Roosevelt After the White House
"Except for one thing, this book would rate as a great adventure novel and fictional psychological portrait, about a woman's obsession with bird-watching, its effect on her relationships with her husband and her four children, and the horrifying mishaps that she survived on each continent--until the last mishap. But the book isn't that great novel, because instead it's a great true story: the biography of Phoebe Snetsinger, who set the world record for bird species seen, after growing up in an era when American women weren't supposed to be competitive or have careers. Whether or not you pretend that it's a novel, you'll enjoy this powerful, moving story."—Jared Diamond, Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse
"An intriguing portrait of one of the best-known birders of the modern age. I couldn't put it down!"—Peter Kaestner, Americas top (living) bird lister
“Life List is an engaging saga of how a brave and complex woman defied cancer and gender in an epic quest to become the first person to see 8,000 bird species."—Frank Gill, author Ornithology
“I am not a woman. I am not a birdwatcher, and don't plan to become one. But I nevertheless found Life List to be a charming, heartening, fascinating, and altogether inspiring guide to living life (and facing death) with one's full attention.”—Kurt Andersen, author of Heyday
“Life List will easily attract bird-people and the rest of us with its distinctive call. Olivia Gentile has written a graceful and very appealing book.”—Meg Wolitzer, author of The Ten-Year Nap and Sleepwalking
"Gentile's tale of a desperate but determined housewife with a passion for birds and adventure is engrossing, sharp, and affecting--a touching portrait and great read."—Susan Orlean, author The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup and The Orchid Thief
“Life List is an uncommon sort of book--a sincere, sometimes sombre flight through the remarkable, storied life of one of birding's most tenacious and most erudite adherents. Olivia Gentile approaches her subject with equal parts sympathy and sobriety, capturing both the exhilaration and the costs of pursuing one's passion to the fullest.”—Edward S. Brinkley, editor of North American Birds Journal
"Olivia Gentiles Life List is the remarkable story of Phoebe Snetsinger, a woman trapped by her life as homemaker, who found liberation in bird watching. Diagnosed with terminal cancer, she began traveling the world, not seeking a cure, but in search of rare birds—becoming a kind of ornithologist's heroine, and living another eighteen years. Gentiles journalistic temperament lures you in, whether you like birds or not (frankly I kind of hate them). The result is a beautifully revealing, sensitive exploration of Snetsingers singular obsession. The story slips under your skin—you cant help but keep reading.”—A.M. Homes
“Phoebe Snetsinger lived a life of high adventure and exotic travel familiar to 19th century explorers - except that she was a 1960s Midwestern housewife who was supposed to be dying of cancer. How she became the world's most driven, globe-trotting birder, what she gained and what she sacrificed to see three-quarters of the Earth's birds, makes Life List an unusually compelling story.”—Scott Weidensaul, author of Of a Feather
Review
“After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Swarthmore, Snetsinger stayed home with [her] four children, a dedicated but dissatisfied mother who might have served only as a cautionary tale for feminists if, one day in 1965, she hadnt encounteredin her own backyarda Blackburnian Warbler. Snetsingers very ordinariness is part of the charm of
Life List, Olivia Gentiles provocative biography of an amateur ornithologist … That Snetsinger flew the coop was both a point of pride and a point of friction for her family, and Gentile does not cast judgment but simply describes what she sees. By documenting the tension between the obligation to others and the obligation to oneself, Gentile has written a book as much about the life of women as about a womans life.”
Christian Science Monitor"Except for one thing, this book would rate as a great adventure novel and fictional psychological portrait, about a woman's obsession with bird-watching, its effect on her relationships with her husband and her four children, and the horrifying mishaps that she survived on each continent--until the last mishap. But the book isn't that great novel, because instead it's a great true story: the biography of Phoebe Snetsinger, who set the world record for bird species seen, after growing up in an era when American women weren't supposed to be competitive or have careers. Whether or not you pretend that it's a novel, you'll enjoy this powerful, moving story."Jared Diamond, Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs, and Steel and Collapse
"[A] fascinating biography … a beautiful story of intellectual passion, love of nature, self-education, self-reinvention, and high adventure." Slate
“Gentiles tale of a desperate but determined housewife with a passion for birds and adventure is engrossing, sharp, and affectinga touching portrait and great read.” Susan Orlean, author of The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup and The Orchid Thief
"Gentile tells Snetsinger's staggering story with clarity and verve. She reflects incisively on the shadow side of Snetsinger's questthe perverse metamorphosis that turned a liberating passion into a devouring addiction, and perceptively elucidates and celebrates her accomplishments. A remarkable woman of tenacity, courage and transcendence, Snetsinger leaves a profound legacy, which will now be more fully appreciated and treasured thanks to Gentile's enthralling, provocative and inspiring biography." Chicago Tribune
"After she heard about the Snetsinger legend, Gentile spent eight years pursuing Snetsinger as earnestly as Snetsinger pursued birds. The result is a wonderful book … Snetsinger's story is an adventure story, a psychological drama, a tragedyand a triumph." Minneapolis Star Tribune
"Riveting." New Orleans Times-Picayune
“Compelling … [A] fascinating portrait of a woman torn between her obligations to her family and her life's passion: birds.” Cleveland Plain Dealer “If you think … [Snetsinger] was a nice little lady who puttered around her back yard with binoculars, think again. Or better yet, read Life List, author and journalist Olivia Gentiles engaging and often exciting biography of Snetsinger … [Snetsinger was] a rare species well worth observing.” St. Petersburg Times
“[Gentile does] a masterful job of investigating and vividly describing the personality, the extreme will to achieve, and the previously unknown life of Phoebe Snetsinger, the famous first lady of world birding ... absorbing and informative.” Surfbirds“There was far more drama in Snetsinger's life than one would ever expect, and Olivia Gentile explores that life gracefully and convincingly... Gentile... places this brainy '50s mom nicely in the context of her times, while probing some of the fundamental questions raised by a hobby that turned into an obsession... A well-told story that carries you along as if on wings.”Hartford Courant
“As much about meaningful living as about sparrows and chickadees, this intimate piece of reportage follows Phoebe Snetsinger, a housewife who in the 1960s takes refuge from banality in bird watching. Gradually sacrificing family ties and personal safety in her quest to see 8,000 birds before dying, she becomes a mythic figure among birders and leads Gentile to ruminate on how obsession with the natural worldso often touted as a scientists best assetcan be destructive as well as fulfilling.” Seed “Life List is riveting ... the story of a suburban housewife and mother-of-four who became a legend in the testosterone-driven world of competitive birding is more than a biography. It raises themes that echo through all our lives, from the restriction of peoples roles by society, to questions of how best to spend ones days on Earth. Is pursuing a rare bird a trivial pursuit, or a chase worthy of respect? Ultimately, Life List asks what it means to live, and die, well.” Nature
“This little book rolls over you like a steam train, slowly gaining speed and intensity, and clattering away in your mind long after you've finished it. With her straightforward, mostly nonjudgmental take, showing without telling, Olivia Gentile raises questions about Phoebe Snetsinger's choices that caused me to examine my own prejudices and boundaries in the pursuit of personal fulfillment. Its penetrating depth is the little surprise of a book that's gripping enough to be a novel, but tells nothing but the truth.” Julie Zickefoose, Bird Watcher's Digest
“Life List is a great book ... Gentile demonstrates how birding can make us feel more alive.” Montreal Gazette
“[Gentile's] enthusiasm in sharing her research is infectious ... [and her] knack for characterizing our feathered friends in a way that gives them some personality is matched by Rebecca Layton's illustrations, which are delightful.” Philadelphia Inquirer
"Lively biography of intrepid, world-traveling ornithologist and cancer survivor Phoebe Snetsinger ... the prose delightfully conveys Gentiles engagement with her subject. Compassionate and comprehensive." Kirkus Reviews
"[A] stirring account of an intriguing woman and the life she led." Booklist
"Gentile's in-depth research and lovely prose is accompanied by 16 equally lovely watercolor bird drawings by Rebecca Layton."Austin American Statesman"Diagnosed in her late 40s with incurable cancer and less than a year to live, [Phoebe Snetsinger] threw herself into birding, traveling worldwide, ignoring injury and danger to work on her life list for another 18 years ... Gentiles ambivalence, celebrating Snetsingers 'having lived so fully and with so much spirit' but noting that 'she had lost the capacity to take into account her family, her health and her safety,' adds a reflectiveness that Phoebe herself may have avoided in life." Publishers Weekly “Snetsinger blended life as a Midwestern wife and mother with that of amateur birdwatcher until she received a terminal cancer diagnosis. Traveling some of the planets most remote and dangerous areas, she defied the odds and spent the next 18 years adding to the nearly 8,400 species on her 'life list,' a record that landed her in the Guinness Book of World Records and was only recently surpassed by two (male) British birders … [she was] as dedicated and focused as the bestdare it be saidIvy League male scientist, a generous leader of her fellow birdwatchers and an advocate who brought attention to the worlds glorious birds and their shrinking habitat.”BookPage
“Olivia Gentiles Life List is the remarkable story of Phoebe Snetsinger, a woman trapped by her life as homemaker, who found liberation in bird watching. Diagnosed with terminal cancer, she began traveling the world, not seeking a cure, but in search of rare birdsbecoming a kind of ornithologist's heroine, and living another eighteen years. Gentiles journalistic temperament lures you in, whether you like birds or not (frankly I kind of hate them). The result is a beautifully revealing, sensitive exploration of Snetsingers singular obsession. The story slips under your skinyou cant help but keep reading.”A.M. Homes, author of The Mistresss Daughter and This Book Will Save Your Life
"An intriguing portrait of one of the best-known birders of the modern age. I couldn't put it down!" Peter Kaestner, Americas top living bird lister
"Phoebe Snetsinger lived a life of high adventure and exotic travel familiar to 19th century explorers - except that she was a 1960s Midwestern housewife who was supposed to be dying of cancer. How she became the world's most driven, globe-trotting birder, what she gained and what she sacrificed to see three-quarters of the Earth's birds, makes Life List an unusually compelling story." Scott Weidensaul, author of the 2000 Pulitzer Prize finalist Living On the Wind and Of a Feather
“I am not a woman. I am not a birdwatcher, and I dont plan to become one. But nevertheless I found Life List to be a charming, heartening, fascinating, and altogether inspiring guide to living life (and facing death) with ones full attention.” Kurt Andersen, host of NPRs Studio 360 and author of Heyday“Life List is an engaging saga of how a brave and complex woman defied cancer and gender in an epic quest to become the first person to see eight thousand bird species.” Frank Gill, author of Ornithology and director and retired chief scientist of the National Audubon Society, and Sally Conyne, retired director of citizen science of the National Audubon Society
“Life List will easily attract bird people and the rest of us with its distinctive call. Gentile has written a graceful and very appealing book.”Meg Wolitzer, author of The Ten-Year Nap and Sleepwalking
“Life List is an uncommon sort of booka sincere, sometimes somber flight through the remarkable, storied life of one of birdings most tenacious and most erudite adherents. Gentile approaches her subject with equal parts sympathy and sobriety, capturing both the exhilaration and the costs of pursuing ones passion to the fullest." Edward S. Brinkley, editor of North American Birds
“Olivia Gentile is a natural storyteller who has found a subject worthy of her remarkable talent. Life List is a book about birds and nature and also about obsession and choices and risk. Gentile has made an elegant, eloquent debut.”Edward Dolnick, author of The Forgers Spell
“A phenomenal talebeautifully toldof escape, risk, and obsession. Judicious [and] insightful.” Patricia OToole, author of When Trumpets Call: Theodore Roosevelt After the White House
Synopsis
A frustrated housewife sets out to see more bird species than anyone in history--and ends up risking her life in the wildest places on earth--in this powerful portrait of Phoebe Snetsinger, who found refuge from society's expectations in a dangerous and soul-stirring obsession.
Synopsis
After her four kids were nearly grown and she was about to turn 50, Phoebe Snetsinger was told she had less than a year to live. Snetsinger, a St. Louis housewife and avid backyard birder, decided to spend that year traveling the world in search of birds. As it turned out, her doctors were wrong, but Phoebe's passion had been ignited and she spent the next eighteen years crisscrossing the globe recklessly staking out her quarry. En route she contracted malaria in Zambia, nearly fell to her death in Zaire, and was kidnapped and gang raped on the outskirts of Port Moresby. Yet none of this curbed her enthusiasm. By the time she died in a bus accident while birding in Madagascar in 1999, Phoebe was world renowned and had seen more species8,500 of the roughly 10,000than anyone in history.
A fascinating portrait of a hobbiest whose obsession contributed to both her success and her demise, Life List brings Phoebe Snetsinger and the wild world of amatuer ornithology to vivid life.
About the Author
Olivia Gentile earned a BA from Harvard College and an MFA from Columbia University. She has worked as a newspaper reporter for which she won the Vermont Press Association's Rookie Reporter of the Year Award and the Connecticut Society of Professional Journalist's Magazine Writing Award.