The Eagles are Back

The Eagles are Back

by Jean Craighead George

Narrated by Wendell Minor

Unabridged — 10 minutes

The Eagles are Back

The Eagles are Back

by Jean Craighead George

Narrated by Wendell Minor

Unabridged — 10 minutes

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Overview

As they did with their previous companion books, THE BUFFALO ARE BACK and THE WOLVES ARE BACK, these longtime collaborators explore the way back from near-extinction of a beloved species. Breathtaking paintings depict the majesty of the birds and the lush landscapes of their environment, while Wendell Minor movingly presents the beloved author's soaring story of a young boy and a park ranger who hatch an eaglet.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

In this inspiring companion to The Wolves Are Back and The Buffalo Are Back, Minor and the late George complete a trio of “environmental success stories that show us it is possible to preserve nature for future generations,” as Minor puts it in his acknowledgments. The book retains the economical prose of its predecessors, though a pair of central human characters—a boy and a park ranger who share a passion for endangered bald eagles—give this story an added intimacy for readers. The bald eagle’s numbers had dropped from half a million when the Founding Fathers named it the national bird to less than 1,000, due in large part to the use of the pesticide DDT. The ranger and boy attempt to get a pair of bald eagles, named Uncle Sam and First Lady, to adopt an egg that has been brought in from Alaska after the birds’ own eggs were destroyed. Minor’s gouache and watercolor are characteristically majestic—from the eagles’ delicate feathers and thatched nests to the cloudy blue skies and bright forests around them, every spread is thick with texture and detail. Ages 6–8. (Mar.)¦

From the Publisher

"Minor’s paintings handsomely convey the eagles’ impressive stature and the natural settings they inhabit...libraries and readers will welcome this engaging introduction to the iconic bird." - School Library Journal

"This would be a useful addition to any library’s collection of books dealing with threatened and endangered species." - Library Media Connection
 

School Library Journal - Audio

05/01/2015
Gr 1–3—In this posthumously published work, George explains how eagles were on the brink of extinction in the 1950s owing to overhunting, deforestation, and pesticides such as DDT. A young boy, who remains nameless, lives in Alaska and has befriended a pair of eagles. The boy volunteers to observe the eagles, named First Lady and Uncle Sam, to see if they will incubate an abandoned egg. The boy observes and helps out by giving the birds fish and visits the eagle family routinely. The audio version has music throughout the narration, contains sound effects of the forest, and is read in the strong, clear voice of the print work's illustrator, Wendell Minor. He paces his voice in order to give young listeners time to understand some of the more complicated concepts such as pesticides. VERDICT This book is informative and would be a perfect jumping-off point for discussions about Earth Day, raptors, Alaskan history, and endangered species.—Katie Llera, Bound Brook High School, NJ

School Library Journal

Gr 3–4—This tale of the bald eagle's survival from a threatened state is set in an undated era when eggs, made fragile as DDT pervaded the environment, cracked under the weight of brooding birds. George begins a fictionalized scheme telling of a boy observing eagles "by a remote lake" and then helping a park ranger to encourage adoption by local birds of an imported egg placed in their empty nest. The author seamlessly blends factual explanations into the story line, telling how the eagles have wide influence on nature as their eating habits send food remnants to smaller creatures and then sketching the birds' years of decline. The boy and the ranger become observers as a successful hatching occurs, and the text then follows the care and growth of the eaglet until it takes flight. Minor's paintings handsomely convey the eagles' impressive stature and the natural settings they inhabit. The book fits loosely with two others in which these longtime collaborators describe animals recovering from threatened extinction-The Wolves Are Back (2008) and The Buffalo Are Back (2010, both Dutton). The factual information is a quick sketch with no author's note or end matter-save a short list of websites-to add facts or indicate if the story is actually grounded in real events. Libraries and readers will welcome this engaging introduction to the iconic bird, and it is a nice addition to the growing list of books featuring children as active participants in caring for the natural world.—Margaret Bush, Simmons College, Boston

APRIL 2015 - AudioFile

The distinctive cry of an eagle greets young listeners, followed by narrator Wendell Minor’s voice detailing the decline in the U.S. bald eagle population in the period of extensive use of the pesticide DDT. As eagles and other wildlife were placed on the Endangered Species list, scientists were desperate to save the national bird. This story of a boy and a ranger who encourage an eagle pair to adopt and nurture an eagle egg is heartwarming. Minor’s warm, conversational manner provides a “you-are-there” experience as the ranger explains the project’s urgency, as the female shakes out her feathers to brood the egg, as the eaglet wobbles along, as the boy catches fish for food. Listeners will be surprised when the identity of the storyteller is revealed. Minor’s panoramas and close-up illustrations add depth to the story. A.R. © AudioFile 2015, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

George, who chronicled the return to America's wild places of wolves and buffalo in two similar titles, now celebrates the comeback of the American bald eagle with a combination of fact and imagination. Her slight story stars an unnamed boy and eagles known as Uncle Sam and First Lady and is set years ago, when eagles were disappearing, their eggs cracking because of DDT in the food chain. The boy helps the eagles, their own eggs broken, raise an eaglet from a transplanted egg by throwing fish he catches to the parents. Not only does the boy watch the pair brood the egg and nurture the hatchling he calls Alaska, he sees it take flight. Later, as an adult watching 30 eagles over the Hudson River, he can tell his son that he contributed to the eagles' return. Though presented as true, the incident is undocumented and the threat to eagles in the contiguous 48 states statistically oversimplified. (The vast majority of the half-million eagles here when the Puritans came lived in Alaska, where they were never threatened.) Nonetheless, readers will be cheered by this inspiring picture book, illustrated with Minor's dramatic gouache-and-watercolor paintings, which portray close-up eagle portraits, vignettes and vast landscapes. A heartwarming culmination to a distinguished career. (Picture book. 5-9)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172253409
Publisher: Live Oak Media
Publication date: 12/15/2015
Edition description: Unabridged
Age Range: 8 - 11 Years
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