We Should All Be Birds
A Memoir
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Narrated by:
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Brian Buckbee
A charming and moving debut memoir about how a man with a mystery illness saves a pigeon, and how the pigeon saves the man.
Featuring an exclusive audio conversation between Brian Buckbee and Carol Ann Fitzgerald.
On a spring evening in Montana, Brian Buckbee encounters an injured baby pigeon. Heartbroken after the loss of the love of his life and increasingly isolated by a mysterious illness that overtook him while trekking through Asia, Brian is unaware that this bird?who he names Two-Step?will change his life. Brian takes in Two-Step, and more injured birds, eventually transforming his home into a madcap bird rehabilitation and rescue center. As Brian and Two-Step grow closer, an unexpected kinship forms. But their paths won’t converge forever: as Two-Step heals and finds love, Brian’s condition worsens, and with his friend’s release back into the world looming closer, Brian must decide where this story leaves him.
We Should All Be Birds follows Brian, unable to read or write due to a never-ending headache, as he dictates the end of his old life?as an adventurer, an iconoclastic university instructor, and endurance athlete?through his relationship with a pigeon that comes to define his present. Limited to dictation, Brian teams up with Carol Ann Fitzgerald, an editor who channels the details of his personal history to the pages. Raw and perceptive, delirious and devastating, We Should All Be Birds is an unflinching exploration of chronic illness, grief, connection, and the spectacular beauty of the natural world?and the humble pigeon. The surprising, heartwarming relationship between man and bird provides insight into what it means to love, to suffer, and to “never forget, even for a second, how big it all is.”
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Editorial Review
When caregiving becomes self-care
I was deeply touched by the tenderness woven throughout every detail of this special debut memoir. Brian Buckbee is an elderly man suffering from a mysterious illness causing a debilitating years-long headache, as well as prolonged heartbreak and loneliness. His misery compounds during the COVID-19 pandemic, until Buckbee finds a glimmer of companionship and purpose when he takes in a wounded bird named Two-Step, then others, turning his home into a rescue-and-return bird sanctuary. Editor Carol Ann Fitzgerald documents the details of Buckbee’s lifelong memories in a series of intimately narrated vignettes by Buckbee—who is otherwise unable to write or concentrate for extended periods of time due to his condition. The two form an unlikely friendship in the process. Grab your tissues—lots of them. We Should All Be Birds reminds us that every connection in life is at once precious and powerful. —Rachael X., Audible Editor
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Heartfelt and heartbreaking well at the same time, redemptive and uplifting
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snapshot of compassion
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For anyone who has lived with ME/CFS or another debilitating illness, the themes will feel achingly familiar: the isolation that seeps into daily life, the quiet grief of mourning your old self while still trying to live your current one, the disbelief and dismissal from some physicians, and — perhaps most painfully — from people closest to you. Brian writes about these experiences with a steadiness that is both devastating and deeply affirming.
The narrative takes a beautiful turn when Brian discovers an injured pigeon, whom he names Two Step. Through the act of rehabilitating this fragile creature, we witness not only the bird’s healing but Brian’s own quiet reclaiming of hope and connection. Two Step becomes a symbol — of perseverance, of care, of life that is still worth nurturing. Alongside V, Two Step's mate, and their offspring, Brian finds himself within an uncurated sanctuary - one of which keeps us wondering, whom has done the rescuing. All this while Brian navigates the uncertainties of chronic illness and the possibility of building something new after loss.
This book does something extraordinary: it speaks so beautifully about something so horrific. It is unflinching in its honesty yet infused with compassion, love, and moments of joy. For those who live with chronic illness, We Should All Be Birds is a mirror — reflecting back the pain, the struggle, and the hard-won moments of grace. For those who don’t, it is an open door into understanding.
Spectacular, moving, and necessary — this is a book that will stay with you long after you turn the last page.
I speak from someone new to this world of the chronically ill; Thank you Brian Buckbee for giving us a voice..., Thank you !
I pick Brian over Chad !
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the most literary fun I've had in a decade
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If we are friends, you will be getting this book for Christmas.
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