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Hardcover The Race to Save the Lord God Bird Book

ISBN: 0374361738

ISBN13: 9780374361730

The Race to Save the Lord God Bird

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

The tragedy of extinction is explained through the dramatic story of a legendary bird, the Ivory-billed Woodpecker, and of those who tried to possess it, paint it, shoot it, sell it, and, in a last-ditch effort, save it. A powerful saga that sweeps through two hundred years of history, it introduces artists like John James Audubon, bird collectors like William Brewster, and finally a new breed of scientist in Cornell's Arthur A. "Doc" Allen and his...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Utterly captivating, even for non-birders

I am a children's book professional who consults with schools & libraries and, as such, I read hundreds of new books every year. It is no small compliment, then, when I say that The Race to Save the Lord God Bird ranks as one of the best-written, most insightful non-fiction books I have EVER had the pleasure of reading! Who knew that a book about one bird species could be such a captivating page-turner? Lest you non-birders think that this book is not for you, I'll mention that my interest in the Ivory-billed woodpecker was merely a passing one until I picked up this book, at the urging of several colleagues. Phillip Hoose's remarkable accounting for the life of this one species has since turned that "passing interest" into a passion, compelling me to put this book into the hands of friends, family members, teachers, librarians, and anyone who's expressed even the slightest interest in things science- or history-related. And NOW, with the announcement that the Ivory-billed Woodpecker has been rediscovered, I feel wonderfully grateful to Phillip Hoose for having given so many of us such deep insight into WHY this re-discovery is truly remarkable news! It should be made clear that Hoose's book does not include information about the recent Ivory-billed sightings in Arkansas, because it was published well before the re-discovery was announced. But what The Race to Save the Lord God Bird does include is perhaps even more important -- a wonderfully clear depiction of how we came to "lose" this magnificent bird in the first place and an understanding of the mistakes we cannot allow ourselves to make again. Do not dismiss this as being a book for "children," as it is anything but. It is a book for EVERYONE, and everyone you give it to will be thanking you for putting it into their hands.

One of the best books of 2004

An exceptionally well documented and highly readable book about the ivory billed woodpecker. Though the reader knows how the book will end, one becomes so attached to this bird that when the last bird's home has been destroyed the reader has a true understanding of the word extinct. Don't miss this one.

Highly recommended survey of the process of extinction

Originally designed and published as a children's book for teenage readers, Philip Hoose's The Race To Save The Lord God Bird is also confidently recommended an ideal introduction for an adult readership as a very highly recommended survey of the process of extinction and changing attitudes towards understanding and protecting species and habitats. From James J. Audubon's early efforts to the plume wars to early collectors of birds, The Race To Save The Lord God Bird documents the ravaging of the bird world around the turn of the century - and the slow realizations of bird extinction processes which evolved from there.

Richie's Picks: THE RACE TO SAVE THE LORD GOD BIRD

Don't it always seem to go That you don't know what you've got Till it's gone? "Before white settlement, more than one-quarter of all the birds in what is now the United States were Passenger Pigeons. They were so abundant that in 1810 Alexander Wilson saw a flock pass overhead that was a mile wide and 240 miles long, containing over two billion birds. That flock could have stretched nearly twenty-three times around the equator. Passenger Pigeons were pretty and brown, with small grayish heads, barrel chests, and long, tapered wings that sent them through the sky at speeds of up to 60 miles per hour. "But they had two problems: they were good to eat and they destroyed crops by eating seeds. Farmers not only shot them, but also cast huge nets over fields to trap them by the thousands. It took only a few decades to wipe out what may have been the most plentiful bird ever to live on the earth. A fourteen-year-old boy named Press Clay Southworth shot the last wild Passenger Pigeon in 1900. The species became extinct in 1914, when Martha, the last captive pigeon, died quietly in the Cincinnati Zoo." You know those arcade games with a steering wheel and a gas pedal? (There never seems to be a brake pedal on those things.) Well, sometimes the world feels to me just like one of those babies, careening along full speed, sound effects and all, with all of us just trying to hold on and not send anyone or anything flying off the road. And then there are also those times it feels like I'm out there on that animated road like a deer in the headlights, waving my arms with all those crazy drivers blindly bearing down on me. "Humans now use up more than half of the world's fresh water and nearly half of everything that's grown on land." Back in 1960, when there were around 177 million people in the United States, I was growing up in Plainview, L.I., which was then the eastern terminus of the Long Island Expressway. I'd sometimes go kite flying in the pasture of a nearby cow dairy. (Yes, cow dairies in Plainview.) In 1970, when the US was up past the 200 million people mark, my parents loaded us in the car for a drive to Florida to see the piece of investment property they'd bought in the middle of nowhere. That nowhere is now the city of Naples, Florida, and the swamps and grassy plains I saw there in 1970 are now nowhere. The Ivory-billed Woodpecker must have been one heck of a bird. Big, noisy, powerful, and fierce, it once existed all over what is now the US South, and its plumage and/or head was prized by Native Americans for decoration and as an amulet. Indians from the North would offer much in trade for their own specimens. Once the white boys arrived, they too killed the Ivory-billed because of the big bucks involved. THE RACE TO SAVE THE LORD GOD BIRD utilizes the story of the Ivory-billed Woodpecker as the centerpiece for a fascinating and vital history that portrays the long and belated evolution of the "bird lovers," from the guys who loved

The Race to Save the Lord God Bird

Phil Hoose is a stunning storyteller. From his descriptions of the Native Americans who wore the heads of this woodpecker around their neck in hopes of "drilling holes through their enemies" to the collectors of the 1800's who shot the bird in the 100's to mount in their home-spun museums to the ornithologists who struggled through endless swamp land just to photograph this beautiful bird--Hoose captures not only the magnificence of this bird, but America's mad march towards progress and the sacrifices we made. You need not be a birder to be captured by this brilliant weaving of ecology and history. Despite the ivory bill woodpecker's apparent extinction from the US swamps, this is not a hopeless story, by any means. The fight to save the Lord God Bird taught us innumerable lessons about habitat, preservation and reverence. A compelling read for ANYONE over age 11.
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