It is 2003, & Paul Arimond is serving as a paramedic in Afghanistan. The twenty-four-year-old has no illusions of becoming a hero. Rather, he has chosen the army to escape the tragedies of his past & his own feelings of guilt. As a result, he finds himself in the same l&, now war-torn, where an ancestor of his, Ambrosius Arimond, a late eighteenth-century traveler & ornithologist, once explored & developed the theory of a universal language of birds. As visceral horrors & everyday banalities of the war threaten to engulf Paul, he, like his great-great-grandfather, finds his very own refuge in Afghanistan s natural world. In a diary filled with exquisite drawings of birds & ruminations on the life he left behind, Paul describes his experiences living with two comrades who are fighting their own demons & his befriending of an Afghan man, Nassim, as well as his dreams of escaping the restrictive base camp & visiting the shores of a lake visible from the lookout tower. But when he finally reaches the lake one night, he finds himself in the midst of a chain of events that, with his increasingly fragile state of mind, has dramatic & ultimately heartbreaking consequences. A meditative novel that shows a new side to the conflict in Afghanistan, The Language of Birds takes a moving look at the all-too-human costs of war & questions what it truly means to fight for freedom. ”