Bird brother A falconer's journey and the healing power of wildlife

Rodney Stotts

Book - 2022

"In Bird Brother, Rodney [Stotts] shares his remarkable journey to becoming a conservationist and one of America's few Black master falconers. For Rodney, a job pulling trash from the Anacostia River with the Earth Conservation Corps began as a side gig to dealing drugs--a way to get a paystub necessary to rent his own apartment. But then something incredible happened: the river's health began improving, and he was part of a small group who helped reintroduce bald eagles to the region. Bird Brother takes readers through the joys and difficulties of Rodney's path to becoming a master falconer: from the delicate work of moving the Anacostia eaglets into their nesting box, to befriending an injured Eurasian eagle-owl named ...Mr. Hoots, to going to jail on drug charges and resolving to dedicate his life to birds of prey upon his release. As he trains his son Mike to be a master falconer and works to establish his own raptor sanctuary, Rodney offers a testament ot the healing power of nature and the importance of second chances."--Dust jacket flap.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
Washington, DC : Island Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Rodney Stotts (author)
Other Authors
Kate Pipkin (author)
Physical Description
xi, 211 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781642831740
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

In this debut memoir, Stotts describes his path to becoming a master falconer and wildlife educator. He begins by telling of his childhood in Washington, DC, during the 1980s and his eventual arrest for dealing drugs. However, a job cleaning up the Anacostia River and later mentoring with the Environmental Conservation Corp drew him to raptors and sharing his love and expertise of raptors and nature with others. He tells how birds, and the draw of the outdoors, kept capturing his attention; he cared for Mr. Hoots, an injured owl hawk used in outdoor education, and he helped reintroduce eagles in the Anacostia watershed. Stotts describes learning simple, but difficult to master truths about raptors and that they require love, patience, and respect. Stotts writes for others who may be looking for wisdom, and he does not sugarcoat the poverty and institutional racism he faced as a Black boy growing up in Washington, DC. VERDICT Stotts's gift for storytelling, as an educator and public speaker, is on full display in this remarkable memoir; it's thought-provoking, moving, and inspiring.--Mark Jones, Mercantile Lib., Cincinnati

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