The Red Circle

In a donation pile at a church rummage sale in rural Ohio, a 58-year field notebook turned up — the lifetime bird checklist of a man who spent every free hour of his adult life cataloging what flew overhead. Every species is marked with a neat penciled check. One isn't. One is circled, in red ink, with nothing written beside it.

The Red Circle
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A composition book turned up at a church rummage sale in Castalia, Ohio — soft marbled cover, spine mended with packing tape two or three times over, coffee ring on the back. Inside: a lifetime of birds. Every weekend, every free Saturday. Fifty-eight years of driving out before dawn to marshes and wildlife refuges and farm fields along Lake Erie. Four hundred and twelve species, each with a date, a location, sometimes a weather note, and a small pencil check.
This episode opens that notebook and reads five entries in order — from the very first robin in April 1964 to a Prothonotary Warbler watched for six exact minutes in the August heat at Magee Marsh, to a Snowy Owl on a fence post that took three separate trips to finally find, to one quiet sentence buried in a 2007 Palm Warbler entry: D. has been gone three years now. Still come out. Hard to explain why but I do. The final entry has no date. No check. Just a name — Kirtland's Warbler — circled in the only red ink in the entire book.
This episode is part of a series that opens fabricated private notebooks found at estate sales and donation piles — each one a fully realized record of an ordinary life, grounded in the vernacular and working rhythms of its decade and place. The convention follows the practice of Found Magazine and Library of Congress oral-history collections: fiction as archive, in service of the real.

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