Papa Goose by Michael Quetting

In 2017, various institutes across Germany and Russia joined teams to form the International Cooperation for Animal Research Using Space, better known as ICARUS. The idea was to use satellites to track population levels of endangered species, changes in climate, the spread of pathogens, and much more, by monitoring the global movements of animals.

When Michael Quetting (pronounced Kfetting) is chosen to lead a small part of ICARUS at the Max Planck Institute where he works, he can’t begin to imagine the emotional impact it will have on him. His task is to hatch and raise a family of goslings so that one day, when they’re ready to fly, he can equip them with the gear that will record weather patterns from an altitude to which we’ve never before had this kind of access, and transmit the data to the ICARUS computers.

Talking to them through the eggs and holding them so they become familiar with his smell, his voice, his very presence, Quetting ensured that when they hatched they would imprint on him and think of him as ‘Papa Goose.’ He didn’t expect, however, that he, too, would feel as though he imprinted on them, and that he would feel the need to raise and protect them as if they were his own children.

Translated from German by Jane Billinghurst, who worked on The Hidden Life Of Trees by Peter Wohlleben, Papa Goose is written with warmth and a quirky sense of humour as it follows Quetting’s escapades with the geese. From watching them get excited over jumping in puddles, to falling asleep with them huddled under his jumper and waking up covered in their shit.

Papa Goose is such a wonderfully lighthearted story, asking questions about our relationship with nature, and how it can teach us a thing or two about keeping it together when the world around us seems to be going crazy, that it made me want to start my own little family of geese.

Well, maybe one day.


Tom Davies works as a bookseller at Readings Doncaster.