How do we live with uncertainty? How can we come to know ourselves, to trust our own secret knowledge? Maria Popova was living through a challenging season of being, longing for guidance, when this improbable project arrived one morning as a fully formed idea fusing her love of birds and her love of language, her skepticism about such echoes of medieval superstition as tarot and her compassion for the basic human yearning to be shown the way through, and her faith in constraint as a powerful catalyst of creativity.
Originally intended as a gift to her friends for her fortieth birthday, she set out to create a sort of avian anti-tarot--a deck of cards less for telling the future than for making sense of the present, for finding grace in the complexities and confusions of our human lives. Each night before sleep, she chose a single bird to work with from a favorite 19th-century ornithological book, from John James Audubon's Birds of America to John and Elizabeth Gould's Birds of Europe, letting her wakeful mind seize a handful of words and phrases from the page, then handing them over to her unconscious as it wrestled with the problem of living in the land of dreams. Each morning, she would read over the text and a kind of message would come to enflesh the skeleton of the noted words--not a poem, not a prescription, but a way of eavesdropping on the conversation between logic and intuition, between knowledge and mystery, between the part of us that already knows how to live through any perplexity and the part that forgets in the overwhelming act of living.
Presented as a deck of cards tucked into book-safe in the style of a 19th-century ornithology tome, An Almanac of Birds gathers one hundred of these poetic collages for readers to savor and shuffle into relevance to their own lives, offering consolation, inspiration, and assurance for the daily perplexity of living.