Categories: BirdsBooks

Book Titles For the Birds

Book Titles For the Birds and Avian Humor

A rather funny blue footed booby (Photo: Wiki Commons)

Bird Related Book Humor

Birders (those who bird watch) and naturalists often have very esoteric (strange?)  and earthy humor but it's uniquely paired with wit, which I love. In this blog post I want to tip my hat to a bird humor group that I joined called the "Facebook Bird Identification Group." This group prides itself in all the completely wrong and improbable identification makes that you could possibly every come up with about birds, in a fun and cheeky way. Recently one of the members posted a request for members to think of all of the bird-based novels they could possibly come up with, and the responses were amazing. I couldn't help but want to share these with the greater world because they are just that funny. So, without further ado here are Book Titles for the Birds, brought to you by the inspired minds of the "Facebook Bird Misidentifiers.

  • A Connecticut Warbler in King Bird’s Court
  • A Farewell to Terns
  • A River Shrike Runs Through It
  • A Room with a Smew
  • A Tree Sparrow Grows in Brooklyn
  • Ana Caracarinina
  • Ani
  • Are you there Godwit It’s Me Murlet?
  • Beauty and the Beaks
  • Blackbird Beauty
  • Bleak House Finch
  • Bonfire of the Chickadees

  • Breeding Bird Atlas Shrugged
  • Canary Row
  • Clockwork Orange Bishop
  • Dances with Plovers
  • Dove Story
  • Drake-u-la
  • East of Egret
  • Eider Robot
  • Even Corbirds Get the Blues
  • Fairwerenheit 451
  • Far From the Madding Crow
  • Fifty Shades of Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
  • Flycatcher in the Rye
  • Franklin Gull Stein
  • Gone with the Wigeon
  • Gone with the Wing
  • Gravity’s Rainbow Lorikeet
  • Heart of Dark-eyed Junko
  • Infinite Nest
  • Jonathan Livingston Seagull
  • Lady Chatterly’s Plovers
  • Last Flamingo in Paris
  • Little House on the Prairie Chicken
  • Little Red Riding Hooded Merganser
  • Lonesome Dovekie
  • Looking for Mister Goodbar-tailed Godwit
  • Lord of the Flycatchers
  • Love in the Time of Cormorants
  • Mandarin Candidate
  • Mississippi Kit Runner
  • Moby Dickcissel
  • Moby Duck
  • My Friend Flicker
  • Nightjar Over Water
  • Of Titmice and Men
  • Oystercatcher in the Rye
  • Penguins Complaint
  • Pride and Pigeoness
  • Pudd’nhead Wilson’s Warbler
  • Silas Murrener
  • So Long and Thanks for all the Fish Crows
  • Something Wigeon This Way Comes
  • Sons and Plovers
  • Swan Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
  • Taming of the Smew
  • The Adventures of Tom Turkey
  • The Autumn of the Partridge
  • The Brown Pelican Brief
  • The Call of the Wild Turkey
  • The Dead Zone-tailed Hawk
  • The Godmother Goose
  • The Grebes of Wrath
  • The Hound of the Basketweavers
  • The House of Green Grackles
  • The Hunt for Red Oxbird
  • The Invisible Manakin
  • The Kinglet and I
  • The Kinglet and the Nighthawks of the Round Table
  • The Last Pigeon Show
  • The Lion, the Witchity, and the Wardrobe
  • The Man Who Would Be Kinglet
  • The Old Man and the Seagull
  • The Old Man and the Seaside Sparrow
  • The Old Man and the Seedeater
  • The Peacock Papers
  • The Pelican Brief
  • The Picture of African Gray
  • The Picture of Dorian Gray Jay
  • The Pipit Papers
  • The Raven
  • The Scarlet Tanager Letter
  • The Strange Case of Charles Dexter Warbler
  • The Sunbittern Also Rises
  • The Treasure of Scrub Jay Island
  • The Turnstone of the Screw
  • Their Eyes Were Watching Godwit
  • Tropicbird of Cancer
  • Typeewee
  • War and Peacock
  • Warblers of the Worlds
  • Winds of Warbler
  • Winter Wren of the World
  • Wuthering Shrikes

I can only take credit for a few of these, the rest are the funny minds of local birders. Can you think of any other good Book Titles for the Birds? Inbox me at Coyoteowlwoman@yahoo.com and I'll add them!

Infinite Spider

My name is Karen and I am currently the Education Program Coordinator at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, working with students K-gray and doing outdoor science education based on Smithsonian research. I have also been a curriculum developer for the Smithsonian Science Education Center and a contract curriculum writer for the Discovery Channel. In my spare time I love to explore nature topics that I want to know more about, which has lead me to blogging here on "The Infinite Spider" (Infinitespider.com). I've designed it to be a science and nature blog for every-day people, naturalists, and outdoor educators. Currently I live in Annapolis, MD. If you have questions you can reach me at greathornedowl76@gmail.com. Let me know if you enjoy the blog or if you would like to see a particular topic covered. Thanks for reading!

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