Nature H is for hawk: a new chapter
Helen Macdonald's bestseller H Is for Hawk told the story of a grieving daughter who found healing in training a goshawk. The goshawk is one of Mother Nature's own fighter jets, capable of finding and killing its prey with the speed of a lightning bolt. Now Macdonald digs deeper into the world of these raptors by following a family in the wild while raising and training a new goshawk of her own.
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Browse Related Items
- ISBN: 9781531700454
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Physical Description
videodisc
1 videodisc (55 min.) : sound, color ; 4 3/4 in. - Publisher [Arlington, Virginia] : PBS Distribution, [2017]
- Copyright ©2017
Content descriptions
General Note: | Inspired by the book H is for hawk by Helen MacDonald. Widescreen. GMD: videodisc. |
Creation/Production Credits Note: | Editor, Nigel Buck ; director of photography, George Woodcock ; music, Cody Westheimer. |
Participant or Performer Note: | Host, Helen Macdonald. |
Date/Time and Place of an Event Note: | Originally aired on television on November 1, 2017. |
System Details Note: | DVD, region 1, NTSC, widescreen presentation; 5.1 surround. |
Language Note: | In English; English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing; descriptive audio. |
Additional Information
School Library Journal Review
Nature : H Is for Hawk - A New Chapter
School Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Gr 7 Up-Helen McDonald's best-selling memoir, H Is for Hawk, chronicled the British author's search for solace and healing after the death of her beloved father through the training of a wild goshawk. Obsessed with birds from childhood, McDonald was an accomplished falconer, but she had never worked with this spirited and secretive bird of prey. She undertakes the training of one that was bred in captivity. Wonderful photography captures young wild goshawks in the nest and attempting their first flights. This program follows McDonald's personal evolution from a grief-stricken, solitary life to one where she can share the training of a new goshawk with a friend. McDonald demonstrates the patience required while guiding her new hawk through hours of gaining her trust, learning to eat from her hand, and eventually flying free and returning. Meandering memories and nostalgia for the past permeate McDonald's stories as she learns to live beyond her grief. Although the falconers of Britain are credited with returning goshawks to the wild after a century of near-extinction, nowhere does McDonald explain the need to subjugate a wild bird to the confines of a captive life. VERDICT The program may interest those who enjoyed the book, as well as students who have a specific interest in birds of prey, but the intense focus on the personal detracts from its use for classroom instruction. It's more suitable for public library collections focusing on grief recovery and personal growth.-Eva Elisabeth VonAncken, formerly at Trinity Pawling School Library, Pawling, NY © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.