To See Every Bird on Earth is meant to be, if you believe what it says on the wrapper, a book that explores the thrill of the chase across the world to witness as many of the earth's birds as possible in a lifetime. There's some of that, but mostly, it's the culmination of what I'm guessing was a lot of therapy for the author; a psychological catharsis of his family's dysfunction, written and published. In many ways, this book was marketed to the wrong demographic; those that find personal substance in others' stories about personal journeys would find a lot to like in this book. Needless to say, it's not my jam.
BUT having said that, in between the family drama being laid bare, there was a lot of interesting insight into the world of Big Listers. Big Listers are those that have seen thousands of the known species of birds in the world. Known species is a moving target, and is currently around 10 thousand. The biggest Big Lister has seen over 8 thousand. This is about big numbers, big money, and big obsessions - and very little about the birds. Koeppel, when he focuses on these people, does a better than credible job getting into their heads and their world and it was fascinating for me, in a rubber-necking kind of way. The chance to see the birds these people have seen is tantalising; how they go about it, like a military invasion, isn't.
But the book helped solidify in my mind my motivations for why I go out looking for birds, and that made it a book I'm glad to have read.