I went to get my Peterson’s Field Guide to Birds recently to identify a transient bird in the back yard, one not often seen. To my increasing dismay, I could not find it on the shelf and feared perhaps I had accidentally given it away when we donated 18 boxes of books recently. When I found it at last, I nearly wept with relief. If you think that’s a little overwrought for a bird identification book, you’d be right.
When my older three siblings were in their senior year of high school, they each received a copy of Peterson’s Field Guide to Birds from my dad. None of us were really as interested in bird watching as my dad and I think that by the time I graduated, he had decided that his traditional gift was a complete dud and probably not valued much by the recipients. He was a quiet man and quietly stopped the tradition, assuming it wouldn’t be missed. Not so. I had no more interest at that time in a bird identification book than my older siblings, but I knew that they had gotten one and the gift seemed an important and sacred rite that had passed me by. In addition, the book symbolized the gift of himself, a sharing of something that was interesting to him and that he thought might be useful for us to have. Most of the gifts we got came from both our parents; this was the only time I can remember our Dad giving us something just from him. When I went to him and asked why I hadn’t gotten one, he was flabbergasted that I’d even noticed. I can’t help but think he was pleased to have been asked. In short order, I received my copy and many years later even started using it, but the most valuable part of it to me is this:

It is irreplaceable.
I’ll probably delete this in the morning.

