Tag Archives: birding

Review: The Bitter End Birding Society, by Amanda Cox

Book cover in pale pink and yellow with birds perching on a delicate tree branch. Text: The Bitter End Birding Society: a novel, by Amanda Cox

The Bitter End Birding Society, by Amanda Cox (Revell, 2025)

“A forbidden romance, a fractured family, and one woman’s journey to piece it all together.” [from the back cover]

Desperate for a quiet space to recover from a traumatic experience, kindergarten teacher Ana heads to the Tennessee mountains to spend the summer with her great-aunt. Her hopes of getting to know Aunt Cora vanish when she discovers the invitation was actually a request for house-sitting while Cora travels with a friend.

Woven between the chapters of Ana’s experiences with the residents in the old mountain town of Bitter End are chapters of her grandmother’s story. That’s where the forbidden romance and fractured family come in.

This is an immersive, faith-filled novel with relatable (and sometimes quirky) characters who struggle to make sense of the hurts they carry. They stayed with me when I wasn’t reading.

The birding society doesn’t come in until almost halfway through the book, but birders will appreciate the group’s hikes and sightings. This is a group started by a local resident named Marilyn, who Ana’s aunt Cora had warned her to avoid. Naturally, Ana finds herself joining the group of misfits Marilyn has collected—and finds these times in nature to be part of the healing process she’s longed for.

I’ll say that one aspect of the grandmother’s plot bothered me (no spoilers!), but that doesn’t keep me from recommending the book to anyone who wants a reflective, heartfelt, and ultimately feel-good story. Especially to anyone who doesn’t feel like they’re “enough” or like they deserve a second chance.

Favourite line:

But now the spaces between who she was and who she’d like to be looked like opportunities for growth and grace instead of evidence of failure. [p. 301]

The Bitter End Birding Society is Christy-Award-winning author Amanda Cox’s fifth book. Her website tagline describes her fiction as “stories of hope, healing, and home.” For more about the author and her work, or to get a free short story prequel to her first novel, visit amandacoxwrites.com.

[Review copy from the public library.]

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Review: A Siege of Bitterns, by Steve Burrows

A Siege of Bitterns, by Steve Burrows (Dundurn Press, 2014)

It’s always a treat to find a new series I like, and when the books are from a Canadian author it feels like an extra bonus. Enter the Birder Murder Mystery series, recommended to me by a birder friend some time ago.

Inspector Domenic Lejeune is too good at his job. So he sticks with policing when he’d rather be hiking across marsh and cliff in search of rare birds. A Canadian serving in the UK police force, he can at least enjoy the location of his new posting. Norfolk is prime birding country.

He only has to overcome the distrust of his fellow officers while solving a high-profile murder case. On the plus side, the deceased was an avid birder. Minus side: the birding community doesn’t trust him any more than his new co-workers do.

Nicely plotted, with a broad cast of characters and complications, A Siege of Bitterns is a satisfying read. It’s one of those omniscient point of view books that drops into multiple heads in the same scene, which always confuses me a bit. Maybe because of the omniscience, it feels like more of a thinking, or puzzle, sort of story instead of a heart one. My brain appreciated that. I’ll definitely be reading more in the series. 

Favourite line:

It was meant to be a smile, but Maik got some sense of the last sight a swimmer might see when a Great White Shark approached. [page 81]

Book 1 in the Birder Murder Mystery series, A Siege of Bitterns received the 2015 Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Novel. You can find Canadian author Steve Burrows here: abirdermurder.com.

[Review copy from the public library. I read the print version, but the digital version is available to libraries through Hoopla Digital.]

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