I read this one because there's an African Grey parrot in it. Unfortunately the author knows nothing about African Greys. He may have looked at a picture of one, but that's where his research ended. It's fiction, of course, but still. If he wanted to have an African Grey as the star of his novel, he should have done some research. At any rate, this African Grey, Paul, carried on real conversations, flew free outside but always came back, and let people touch him whenever and wherever they wanted.
There are a lot of parrots in shelters, and books like this don't help. It perpetrates myths that make people want an African Grey, and then they end up surrendering it when it doesn't live up to their expectations - it's neurotic, messy, expensive, bites hard, lives forever and doesn't have real conversations.
Anyway. Apart from that, the writing is mediocre, the book is sappy and simplistic, and the characters lack depth and dimension. It was an easy, mindless read, though.