Jack E. Davis is the author of the award-winning The Gulf: The Making of An American Sea and An Everglades Providence: Marjory Stoneman Douglas and the American Environmental Century. A professor of environmental history at the University of Florida, he lives in Florida and New Hampshire.
"Davis, the Pulitzer-winning author of The Gulf, makes clear in his
rollicking, poetic, wise new book that cultural and political
history are an integral part of this natural history, not to be
omitted if we want to tell the whole story.... Along with the
famous humans, Davis never neglects the birds themselves.... Davis
shines at most everything in this exuberantly expansive book, but
especially at highlighting individual birds like the translocated
ones making their way in the world. With eagle numbers now
estimated at levels they were before 'America became America,'
their comeback is astonishing."
*Vicki Constantine Croke - New York Times Book Review*
"An impressive work of scholarship . . . . if you have any
questions about our national bird, Mr. Davis’s The Bald Eagle is a
great place to look for answers."
*Bill Heavey - Wall Street Journal*
"Jack E. Davis wants it very clearly understood that a bald eagle
cannot, in fact, pluck an infant girl from her carriage, carry her
clenched between its talons to its nest, and feed her to its
eaglets. Okay?.... Why did Americans nearly drive America’s bird to
extinction? In The Bald Eagle, Davis, who won a Pulitzer Prize for
The Gulf, a clever history of 'America’s Sea,' has written a double
biography: a history of the species and a history of the symbol....
The Bald Eagle is the rare natural history that plays as a comedy.
It’s a dark comedy, however, because its lessons are not easily
transferable to our broader, ongoing ecological catastrophe. The
bald eagle is not only a symbol of American might. It is a symbol
of American exceptionalism.... A moving portrait of a species
victimized for its own evolutionary successes."
*Nathaniel Rich - The Atlantic*
"A feel-good story.... [A] engaging and highly detailed cultural
and natural history of the unofficial national bird (Davis points
out that no president or Congress has ever signed a proclamation or
law making it official).... Davis deftly brings alive the bald
eagle as a real animal, separate from both the myths of its
rapaciousness and the symbolic majesty that at times has made the
birds emblems for organizations ranging from the National Rifle
Association to the National Wildlife Foundation."
*Matt Jaffe - San Francisco Chronicle*
"[A] soaring new book… The Bald Eagle is compelling and paints a
dignified portrait of the famous bird, within and outside of
American culture. The author’s occasional playful tone lightens the
mood during its darker moments and even helps to underline the
hypocrisy of the treatment of this bird of prey, simultaneously
esteemed and maligned. This is a history that turns the tables on
Americans; the creature that embodied the scrappiness of the early
nation is now a model of resilience we can only hope to
emulate."
*Olive Fellows - Christian Science Monitor*
"The tale, as Davis told Ideas in a recent Zoom chat from his home
in Gainesville, Fla., is an unusually upbeat one in a moment of
deep environmental worry. But that, he suggests, is the point."
*David Scharfenberg - Boston Globe*
"Splendid.... [Davis] is a meticulous historian and researcher as
well as a master storyteller – an irresistible combination."
*Collette Bancroft - Tampa Bay Times*
"The new book by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Gulf: The
Making of an American Sea feels especially timely, with several new
bird extinctions announced last year and the need to counter those
losses with tales of conservation success."
*John R. Platt - The Revelator*
"A majestic history of the bald eagle and how it has reflected the
nation’s changing relationship to nature... The author’s
consistently lively, captivating narrative celebrates the
naturalists, scientists, activists, artists (Andy Warhol, among
them), politicians, and breeders who have championed the
extraordinary “charismatic raptor"... A rousing tale of a species’
survival."
*Kirkus Reviews, starred review*
"Combining natural, political, and cultural histories, Davis offers
a wealth of surprising information and demolishes popular
misconceptions . . . Well-timed humor... keeps things moving, and
his writing is vivid . . . This account soars."
*Publishers Weekly, starred review*
"This fascinating and readable work will appeal to fans of the
majestic bald eagle and those interested in the natural, cultural,
and political history of the United States."
*Dave Pugl - Library Journal*
"Davis' unique look at a bird we all thought we were familiar with
is well-researched and chock-full of fascinating historical and
nature-oriented vignettes."
*Nancy Bent - Booklist*
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