Jeremy Mynott is the author of Birdscapes: Birds in Our Imagination and Experience (2009), a book exploring the variety of human responses to birds, described by reviewers as 'the finest book ever written about why we watch birds' (Guardian) and 'a wonderful rumination on birds and birders through space and time for anyone interested in our relationship with nature' (THES). He has also published an edition and translation of Thucydides in the series 'Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought' and, more recently, Knowing your Place, an account of the wildlife in a tiny Suffolk hamlet. He has broadcast on radio and television, and is a regular reviewer for the TLS and wildlife magazines, a founder member of 'New Networks for Nature', the former Chief Executive of Cambridge University Press, and Emeritus Fellow of Wolfson College, Cambridge.
Mynott provides a detailed picture of ancient understandings of birds-whether as food source or literary symbol - in the context of the literary passages and the social order of the time ... He includes a time line of ancient writers and historical events as well as a biographies section, which summarizes the contributions of various ancient authors in documenting birds. Further scholarly apparatus include a general index, a bird index, and extensive endnotes. This title complements Birds in the Ancient World A-Z (2012) and belongs in robust classical studies collections and in ornithology departments. * CHOICE * A beautifully produced volume, with full-colour illustrations, acknowledgements, a bird index and a general index, a very full bibliography, detailed references, footnotes and lists of the bird species found in the sources. These academic accoutrements only add a flourish, though, to the approachable and enjoyable nature of the actual read. * Liz Dexter, Shiny New Books * Classical literature is a rich source of bird-related forteana, as this superb study reveals ... a delightfully easy read, thanks to Mynott's stylistic panache: fluent, quasi-Herodotean, jargon-free, consistently witty ... Not many writers can claim to have the last word on their subject. Mynott though, is that - have to say it - rare bird ... For naturalists, scientists, social historians, twitchers, this superlative study will surely fly... * Barry Baldwin, The Fortean Times * The history lover inside me drew me to this title but I was pleased to find my ecologist's curiosity satisfied many times whilst reading this book ... From the earliest images and writings that birds can be identified from, you will find yourself amazed at what can be discovered from sources well over 1000 years old that can be linked with present day species and their distributions. It is such a richly detailed book that you might not be able to read it from start to finish in one go, but the chaptering allows you to dip in and out and discover something new each time you pick it up. * Katharine Bowgen, British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) * At a time when we need to be listening to the messages from birds from declining puffins losing their sand eels from warming seas, to Mediterranean Great White Egrets now breeding each year in Somerset this book offers brilliant insights into an earlier human culture's intimate relationship with another species. * Terry Glifford, Green Letters: Studies in Ecocriticism * This publication can be considered an essential sourcebook for those who want to delve deeper into how birds were appreciated by the Greeks and Romans. * Antiqvvs * Birds in the Ancient World is a welcome and important resource for the scholar working on any aspect of birds in all spheres of medieval life ... Mynott's erudite discussions, though, will make an excellent companion for those wishing to explore the classical legacy in medieval 'nature' paradigms. * Michael Warren, Medium Aevum * Jeremy Mynott's new book is by far the most erudite book on birds I have ever read. It is a compelling combination of the history of birds and the ancient world that throws both into new relief ... this original guide comes highly recommended. * Alexandra Henton, The Field * ... provides a comprehensive introduction and overview of the role of birds within ancient society. The book is distinct from previous scholarship on birds in the ancient world with its approach to the material ... Mynott's style will no doubt engage non-Classicists, particularly ornithologists and bird-watchers, through his intelligent use of modern comparisons and presentations of extracts of ancient texts. However, I also believe his book could work as a set-text for undergraduate students, particularly for modules that discuss the interaction between ancient societies and the natural world. * Ben Greet, The Classical Review * For Dr Mynott, 'the significance of birds' is his binding theme in this illustrated cultural history with liberal quotations from some of humanity's greatest literature at this formative period of Western history. * John McEwen, Country Life * This is a wonderfully readable book, scholarly but fully accessible, continually thoughtful, properly sceptical, often amusing, and culled from knowledge of ancient literature that must be second to none ... It is nicely illustrated in full colour. Whether you read the book straight through, or in a series of dips, it is full of revelation and insight into the ancient mind-set, which was once familiar and strange ... Thanks to Jeremy Mynott, the birds of the ancient world have taken flight, and we can go birding in that magical lost world. * Peter Marren, British Wildlife * One of the most beautiful, most engaging and simply most delightful books I have read in a long time ... Mynott has offered a masterclass in writing a work that popularizes Classics and explains the discipline's relevant authority, clearly and memorably to outsiders ... Among many splendid features of this volume, I wish to highlight its illustrations ... this is a splendidly learned and superbly interesting account of the manifold ways in which birds and humans interacted in antiquity, but it is more than that: this is a book which incites one to ponder upon fundamental ecological and environmental issues and to re-examine our own relationship to the natural world. * Andrej Petrovic, Greece & Rome * Jeremy Mynott's masterful cultural and scientific history tours their [birds] roles as timepieces, soundscapes, pets, messaging services even intermediaries with the supernatural. The vivid artworks and literary passages give this wings... * Barbara Kiser, Nature * Mynott organises his elegant and thought-provoking book by theme and deploys a comprehensive range of quotes from throughout the classical period ... His approach is nuanced and open-minded, and he writes with a light, often wry touch ... The book is full of delightful titbits. * Philip Womak, Literary Review * With a glorious array of references, vivid images, and his own astute philosophical commentary, Mynott deftly brings all this into sharp focus: are all these ancient associations, uses and abuses really so different from the way we see birds? * Philip Hoare, New Statesman * A distinguished publisher and writer on both classics and bird-watching, Mynott has scoured thousands of pages on a literary nature trail... * Peter Stothard, The Times Literary Supplement * [An] excellent new book. * Robin Lane Fox, The Financial Times * A book the world has been waiting for, rich, scrupulously organised, imaginative, beautifully written, and driven by a double passion. On the one hand, for birds and human interactions with them. On the other, for the ancient world, especially those Greeks who 'invented the concept of nature' and the scholarship which brings their thoughts and observations alive. * Ruth Padel, author of Darwin - A Life in Poems, The Mara Crossing, and In and Out of the Mind * This scholarly, yet readable and fascinating book presents a detailed account of how our current obsession with birds began ... beautifully produced volume, illustrated throughout with striking colour images ... Mynott's book brings to life the variety of ancient scholars and artists who were inspired by birds. The sheer volume of material must, one feels, have been daunting, yet Mynott has processed it in a sensitive and logical fashion ... this definitive and original account of birds in the ancient world will serve as an invaluable reference for all subsequent historians of ornithology, and indeed, zoology as a whole. * Tim Birkhead, Archives of National History * It is [...] thought-provoking, highly readable and exhaustive. Mynott has made an enormous effort to trawl the whole of the classics for bird references. The materials unearthed are far greater than anything previously considered and an appendix supplying potted biographies of the Greek and Roman authors discussed in the book includes more than 100 names ... Perhaps the pre-eminent achievement of the book is not its fastidious examination of classical birds, but the way it pans backwards from the avian minutiae to give us a much broader vision of the two great civilisations. * Mark Cocker, The Spectator * [A] stunning new book ... reading this splendid study, I experienced some of the excitement that humanists must have felt at entering into a lost world ... Beautifully produced, informed by wonderful scholarship, Birds in the Ancient World embodies the Renaissance spirit, as a model of humane and civilised learning. * Mike McCarthy, Resurgence & Ecologist Magazine * An astonishing combination of knowledge and sheer readability ... a copiously and richly illustrated review ... I think we should be grateful to Jeremy Mynott for this wonderful book, which both illuminates that understanding and broadens our knowledge. * Roger Riddington, British Birds * [A] superb book ... Mynott quotes [...] 120 authors in total, some translated into English for the first time. All the translations are Mynott's own. The period covered is approximately 700 BC to AD 300 and, since Mynott's approach is thematic, each chapter ranges pretty freely across those thousand years. It is, without doubt, a major achievement and a brilliantly sustained exercise in what Mynott [...] calls 'thinking with birds' ... We are fortunate to have in Mynott, who is both an ornithologist and a classicist, the perfect guide for such explorations. * Mathew Lyons, History Today * Jeremy Mynott's Birds in the Ancient World is an absolute joy, beautifully written and gloriously illustrated. * Peter Thonemann, Books of the Year 2018, The Times Literary Supplement *