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The Search for the Pink-headed Duck [Paperback]

Rory Nugent (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 28, 1993
Over 50 years after the pink-headed duck was last seen in the wild, Nugent set off for India in search of this rarest of birds. In the tradition of the best travel narratives, he recounts his experiences in such places as Calcutta, Sikkim's Valley of Bliss, Darjeeling, and the Indian wilderness.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Of all the hardships a traveler might face--war, plague, earthquakes, bad potato salad--few are as daunting as dealing with the Indian civil service. So we learn from Rory Nugent, a journalist and sailor who got it in his head some years ago that he had to catch a glimpse of Rhodonessa caryophyllacea, the Himalayan pink-headed duck last seen in 1935. Having finally made his way through the Calcutta bureaucracy to obtain a visa to northwestern India, Nugent was obliged to survive encounters with pirates, Gurkha separatists, Tantrist necrophiliacs, a curse on his head, suspect food, a raft trip down the malarial Brahmaputra River, and an endless-loop cassette of Jethro Tull's greatest hits. Nugent may or may not have spotted his duck by journey's end (his sighting is unconfirmed), but in this amusing and eventful account, the search for the creature is a worthy end in itself.

From Library Journal

Nugent, who has sailed solo across the Atlantic four times, journeys to the exotic environs of India where he searches for a special, possibly extinct duck last sighted in 1935. He visits New Delhi, Sikkim, the fowl market in Calcutta, and eventually takes an exciting, danger-filled boat trip on the Brahmaputra River from Burma to Bangladesh. Nugent introduces many Indians he meets along the way and describes some spectacular scenery. At one point he befriends members of the Gurkha National Liberation Front and witnesses the brutality of its struggle for freedom. His true discovery is that it is the journey and the search that are important, not the ultimate goal. Nugent is eccentric and courageous; his writing is humorous, insightful, and captivating-- Melinda Stivers Leach, Preci sion Editorial Svces., Wondervu, Col.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 222 pages
  • Publisher: Mariner Books (June 28, 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0395669944
  • ISBN-13: 978-0395669945
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #905,468 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Nugent is an American writer and explorer. His work takes inventory of the more neglected shelves in the communal warehouse, areas riddled with deep shadows due to stock, especially cultures and traditions, gone missing and about to go missing. He has published numerous newspaper and magazine stories, along with three books: THE SEARCH FOR THE PINK-HEADED DUCK (Houghton-Mifflin, 1991); DRUMS ALONG THE CONGO (Houghton-Mifflin, 1993); and DOWN AT THE DOCKS (Pantheon, 2009).

Nugent was born in New York. After graduating from Williams College(1975), he went to sea aboard freighters and sailboats. He made his bones, though, in 1976, the youngest American competitor in the Observer Singlehanded Trans-Atlantic Race. He went to make three more solo Atlantic crossings. His fifth attempt ended smack dab in the middle of the drink, shipwrecked by a rogue wave. He was rescued five days later and twenty-eight pounds lighter.

Not wanting to swim anymore, Nugent took to field research. He mounted one man expeditions in search of nature's numinous wonders before they were lost to map and mind and chainsaws and hydroelectric projects. His travels took him down great rivers, through the clouds (into the Himalayas), across deserts, and through jungles, and more.

In 1992, Nugent switched gears and became a full time journalist, his beat, the nightmare, his quest, those missing elements allowing it to prosper.For the next ten years, he tracked nitwit generals and their lousy wars in Europe, Asia and Africa.Along the way, he became intimate with the prophets of intolerance and bore witness to the insanity of killing fields the size of Texas.

His work for a wire service and especially, his long investigative pieces for magazines merited routine inclusion on short-lists for annual hack awards.

After finishing an assignment in Iran/Iraq in 2002, Nugent exited the gloom, refocused on America and gathered notes for his book, DOWN AT THE DOCKS. A new book is underway

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hunter S. Thompson's illegitimate son does India, May 4, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: The Search for the Pink-headed Duck (Paperback)
A goofy book that would do the good Doktor proud with its gonzo traveling companions including ex-chefs for the governor of New York, now Hindu mystics, Kashmiri seperatists, and smugglers. Probably one of the last travel books to truely visit real unexplored territory. This book is a rollicking picaresque tale where the humor and liveliness of the people and country are vividly illustrated without an underlying self-discovery subtext. Not neccessarily a Pulitzer winner, but a great time, like a good Bond movie
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fun travel essay, so-so natural history book, December 5, 2004
By 
Tim F. Martin (Madison, AL United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Search for the Pink-headed Duck (Paperback)
Bird watcher Rory Nugent one day heard about the pink-headed duck (_Rhodonessa caryophyllacea_), a species of waterfowl once known from northeastern India. Its Hindi name gulab-sir, the last confirmed sighting of it was in 1935 by a sportsman hunting in the Darbhanga area of Bihar. Never a particularly common animal, it only turned up occasionally during in the Raj in such places as the open markets of Gangtok, Sikkim. Never successfully bred in captivity despite several efforts, the bird was presumed to have gone extinct when most of its prime habitat - marshland around Calcutta - was destroyed though some naturalists held out hope that it may have lingered on in other areas of marsh in the Bengal plain and in northeast India (much of it which is fairly isolated and not well explored by naturalists).

Nugent became enamored with the animal, sold his apartment, put his belongings into storage, and set out to India to try and find the animal. The book he wrote, _The Search for the Pink-Headed Duck_, is his account of his many months of travels in northern and eastern India.

The first half of the book is about him essentially asking about the bird, sometimes in areas and with people whom he suspects have little likelihood of knowing anything about the animal. He spends weeks investigating the fowl markets of Calcutta, checking in every day to see if one has turned up or if anyone knows anything about the bird. Though greeted with suspicion at first, the locals soon warm up to him, calling him the Duck Man, and while providing little if any information do show him many kindnesses. Eventually though as word gets out he is offering a reward for any information on the bird - or the bird itself - a parade of painted birds (including some birds that weren't even ducks) were offered to him for sale. After buying a few so that he could clean them off and set them free, he realized that he had established a precedent he didn't care much for - that he would buy just about anything - and he moved on.

Journeying to the capital of New Delhi, he spent literally months trying to get permission to visit some of the most remote areas of northeastern India. At first treated as if he were some sort of spy - though not a very good one - he is later treated as a crazy man (officials incredulous that he is looking for a mere duck), though later many of the officials at the ministry warm to him. Though they deny his requests repeatedly, they are not unfriendly and give him advice on how to appeal each decision as it is made.

As the lengthy process to grant him approval winds its way through the labyrinth of bureaucracy, Nugent took two side trips that had really nothing to do with his quest. During the course of his travels he met several individuals who implored him as a visiting westerner and obviously a journalist of some type to expose to the world their various causes. One, a Buddhist named Ganju Lama convinced Nugent to journey with him to Tibet to verify Chinese wrong-doing, but through a series of misadventures he does not actually reach Tibet. Another he met introduced him to key leaders - indeed the key leader, Subash Ghising - of the Gurkha National Liberation Front, people who impress among Nugent the "rightness" of their cause of Gurkha autonomy if not independence. All of this was interesting and at times hilarious but had absolutely nothing to do with the pink-headed duck (making for good travel writing but not so good natural history writing).

The second half of the book I found a bit more interesting and a bit more on-topic with the book's title. Just by happenstance meeting in a bookstore in New Delhi a man named Shankar Barua who had roughly similar interests, the two hatch a scheme (after Nugent finally won approval for his journeys) to buy a boat and journey down the mighty Brahmaputra River, an immense 2,900 kilometer river that begins in Tibet and winds its way through India and Bangladesh on its way to the sea. They purchase a boat that Shakar names _Lahey-Lahey_ (Assamese for "Slowly, slowly"), a tiny boat that is ten feet at the waterline, twelve long overall and "at her beamiest" is thirty-inches. Though Nugent, a sailor, admires her lines, the boat continually under whelmed most of the locals who saw it.

This journey was Nugent's best chance to spot the duck, and in truth he described very briefly a lot of the wildlife he saw, which included crested serpent eagles, storks, ibises, bitterns, kingfishers, Ganges dolphins, mergansers, pariah kites, and even a rarely seen fishing cat (though a bit too briefly I thought and there are no pictures of these animals; lots of nice pictures instead of the people he met, boats he saw, and some of the buildings and other sites). He saw lots of ducks - including a great many pochards, a species of which does faintly resemble the pink-headed duck in having a red head - I don't think I am spoiling anything by saying Nugent does not get his bird.

He has lots of adventures during his long river journey as he is treated with awe, suspicion, humor, or respect at various times because he was a "firang" or foreigner (being the first white person many along the river had ever seen; many had wondered what was the matter with Nugent that made him looked the way he did). Nugent and Shakar, warned of pirates and crocodiles, found little of either but did have trouble with a whirlpool. They met a variety of interesting people, including Tantrists (who believe that sexual energy is the purest form of energy) and "bongs" (sailors from Bangladesh, not recorded a great deal of respect by the Indians).

An interesting book, sometimes very funny, fairly light on natural history though a good travel essay otherwise.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An unforgettable journey - An inspiration!, November 10, 2000
By 
Tom D Maher (Carrick on Shannon, IRELAND) - See all my reviews
I got a signed copy of this book years ago from Rory's mum Polly. It was during my "not reading very much" phase and so read it piecemeal over 4 years! Didn't do it justice at all. Currently re-reading it and just can't put it down. Unfortunately, I've only 20 pages of this spectacularly intrepid adventure left. MY ADVICE - Read this book. If there is even an ounce of adventurous spirit in your blood, it will move you to seize it, pack your bags and head off in a bold search to realise your daring dreams. RORY - please please reprint "Drums Along the Congo". If it's anything like your adventure with Shankar and the GNLF it will move me to quit my job and take flight! SUMMARY - an unforgettable book, an unforgettable journey, a true inspiration.
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