The Feather Wars is a well written monograph on bird conservation, with a particular focus on American history, written by James McCommons. Released 17th March 2026 by Macmillan on their St. Martin's imprint, it's 416 pages is available in hardcover, audio, and ebook formats. It's worth noting that the ebook format has a handy interactive table of contents as well as interactive links.
This is both well written and layman accessible. The author has a solid, engaging, forthright style of writing and a logical process. The subject matter (despite the lens of passing years) is grim, full of hubris and arrogance.
The book covers a large amount of time, more or less chronologically. The chapters are thematic, written around specific species (Ivory Billed woodpecker, passenger pigeon, wood duck, trumpeter swans, and dozens of other species which either became extinct, or nearly so, because of human driven causes).
As stated, the book is copiously annotated and the chapter notes provide a wealth of further reading for readers wishing to deep dive in the material. There's also a collection of facsimile archival photos and documents from the time period, reproduced in color.
I enjoyed this read immensely. I would heartily recommend it for lovers of science philosophy and conservation history, but maybe not so much for readers looking for "just the facts, Ma'am". This has been one of my better nonfiction reads for 2026.
Four stars.
Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.




