Mesmerising ... Theres something endlessly pleasurable in listening to a person talk about a subject on which theyre both an enthusiast and an authority, and Tim Birkhead has both qualities in abundance. * The Telegraph * As Tim Birkhead reminds us in this wide-ranging and deeply researched study, human exploitation of the species goes back millennia A lively and meticulous book. * The Spectator * A sad but engrossing elegy The story of the great auk, movingly told in this book, continues. This remarkable bird is not forgotten. * Mail on Sunday * A fascinating book The Great Auk tells the story of an iconic bird. * Literary Review * Quite simply, one of the best natural history books I have read. * Birdwatch * Tim Birkhead ably recreates the life of the flightless bird, and the far more bizarre after-story of humans fighting over skins, skeletons and egg collections its a rallying call for conservation. * The Tablet * Weaves a fascinating 20,000-year history of encounters with these intriguing birds into a deeper narrative exploring the tragedy of how human wonder and passion can mutate into destructive obsession. * Rebecca Wragg Sykes, author of Kindred * The story of the Great Auk reveals how the attitudes and values of people cause entire species to be condemned to extinction. From the fragments of written historical accounts and the eggs and skins collected as the species teetered at the edge of oblivion, Birkhead expertly charts the demise and afterlife of a bird that while to this day is often discussed will never again be seen alive. This is the brilliantly told true story of a legend. * Tony Juniper * The many strands that are the mark of the author, Tim Birkhead, are drawn together to tell the story of the Great Auk that is both expert and fascinating A lifetime of experience and deep passion are woven into the pages of this book, and we are left with the message that all of us have a duty to make sure that this tragedy must not happen again. * Mary Colwell, author of Curlew Moon * What a story! I was completely gripped by both the biology and the very human tale and Tim Birkheads perseverance in following it, not to mention his eloquence in telling it. * Matt Ridley, author of The Red Queen * A comprehensive and beautifully written account of this extinct bird. * Errol Fuller, author of Lost Animals *