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A Wing in the Door: Life With a Red-Tailed Hawk
 
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A Wing in the Door: Life With a Red-Tailed Hawk [Anglais] [Broché]

Peri Phillips McQuay


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Amazon.com

At home from Panama to the Arctic, red-tailed hawks are a common sight in the skies of North America. But because red-tails are understandably shy of humans, they are usually a distant sight, and few people get the opportunity to observe the raptors up close for more than a fleeting second.

Peri McQuay, a Canadian writer and naturalist, is one of those few. Called on to help raise a young red-tail that had been taken from the wild early and trained--but only partly--by a would-be falconer, she embarked upon what she clearly considers to be the adventure of a lifetime. Warned that Merak, the young bird, might have imprinted on humans and therefore likely could not fend for herself, McQuay spent the next several seasons encouraging Merak to find a home for herself in the world to which she belonged, probing the depths of raptor psychology in an attempt to help Merak learn to hunt, find a mate, and return to the wild state that was her birthright.

The experiment, as McQuay writes in this thoughtful memoir, had mixed results. Her portrait of Merak is sympathetic, affectionate, and full of surprises (among them the humorous revelation that a bird of prey and a cat can arrive at an accommodation, and even live in peace), if tinged with sorrow for what has become of so much of the wild. McQuay's affecting tale of "the gift of this pitiably damaged yet magnificent hawk" will inspire any student of wild birds. --Gregory McNamee

From Publishers Weekly

In 1998, a two-year-old red-tailed hawk, taken illegally as a nestling by a falconer, was released back into the wild on the 800-acre protected wildlife area in eastern Ontario where McQuay and her family lived. Because the hawk, whom they called Merak, was human-imprinted, it took the McQuays four years to shepherd her transition more or less successfully back into her natural environment. In this engrossing memoir, McQuay (The View from Foley Mountain, 1995) relates how Merak became a part of her family's daily life, and, despite the bird's hunting ability, depended on them for sustenance, particularly during the molting season. Her clean, careful prose sometimes yields lovely imagery, as in this description of Merak's acclimation: "she practices teetering hops from branch to branch" with "a sober elation.... She seems to be holding up her feathers like a little girl hampered by long skirts." McQuay unsentimentally evokes the bird's harsh beauty, and the frequent anguish inherent in harboring a wild creature; the hawk harassed the family's dogs and would have attacked their cats without human intervention. Meanwhile, McQuay constantly worried that Merak was undernourished, and supplemented her food with skinned muskrats from a neighboring trapper. Merak built nests and laid eggs every spring, but they were never fertilized. Although Merak eventually undertook an almost completely independent existence, she still visits the McQuays when she is in need. B&w photos not seen by PW. (Mar. 20)
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Freelance writer McQuay (The View from Foley Mountain), who lives on an 800-acre Ontario conservation area, tells the story of her life there with a semi-wild red-tailed hawk. The hawk was released, when already human-imprinted, after its confiscation, from a falconer who had obtained it illegally. Neither author nor bird ever completely reconcile with each other. Long on anecdotes, this work is most successful when McQuay writes knowledgeably about bird behavior, physiology, and the natural life on her preserve, less so when she details the lives of her family and menagerie of pets. Still, in describing at length the joys, sorrows, and heavy investment required in trying to rehabilitate an impaired wild animal, she provides useful information for concerned readers everywhere. Henry T. Armistead, Free Lib. of Philadelphia
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Booklist

Canadian conservationist McQuay's View from Foley Mountain recounted the story of the author's unusual bond with an orphaned skunk; similarly, her new book chronicles her four-year companionship with a red-tailed hawk that had been snatched from its nest too early by a falconer and then, apparently, abandoned. It's a gentle story, at times comical, always enjoyable. Like most similar tales, its ending is both happy and predictable--the bird is eventually released back into the wild--but getting there is most of the fun. The author is a fine lyrical writer, able to paint small, perfect word-pictures that make us feel as though we're actually watching the young hawk stumble through her education into the ways of the wild. This title should do very well wherever there is an audience for literary nature writing. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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