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H is for Hawk
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H is for Hawk - Macdonald
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Read September 2019 for TBR Takedown

This is very different from both 1001 books. It is also one of the few examples of true non-fiction on the list. The book is a memoir about a young woman's experiences with taming a goshawk. She interveaves her narrative with her experiences of grief and biographical data about the author T.H. White and his books, The Goshawk and The Once and Future King.

Amanda wrote: "I just read the entire book yesterday and loved it immensely…5 stars. The actual falconry parts of it were intriguing and made me miss working for ecologists. So, the hawk is a literal hawk, but th..."
I think it will inform your reading and I would follow up with it probably sooner than later. I read The Once and Future King a while before this came out. I think reading the memoir first followed by White's novel is the way to go.
I think it will inform your reading and I would follow up with it probably sooner than later. I read The Once and Future King a while before this came out. I think reading the memoir first followed by White's novel is the way to go.

Cool... maybe I'll squeeze it in this year then. Thanks for the suggestion!

I enjoyed the first two-thirds of this book, I found all the commentary about the loss of her father, the training of Mable and the history lesson on White all wove together in an intricate experience. But then it lost its magic, just fell off a cliff and into a series of anecdotes about Helen stumbling around in fields and woods after Mable, constantly fearing she's lost her forever and berating herself that she should have known better. She tries to bring it all back together in the final few chapters but it doesn't quite work for me. It needed to be a good few chapters shorter, then it would have delivered as a whole package.

It is also impressive how Macdonald combines the nature writing genre with the psychological exploration of grief and its physical impact on her, and with the biography genre of the life of White which also veers into psychology and history. It adds depth and variety to the story of Mabel, even though that remains the most prominent aspect.
I found this an absorbing and unusual book, and very uplifting.
*** 1/2
Not technically a novel, but an interesting memoir on how to train hawks, grief and interesting tidbits about T.H. White, who also happened to (badly) train hawks. The meshing of these three threads was captivating and certainly more interesting than another bird training novel I recall (A Kestrel for a Knave). The last few chapters felt a bit flat, otherwise this could have been a 4-star.
Not technically a novel, but an interesting memoir on how to train hawks, grief and interesting tidbits about T.H. White, who also happened to (badly) train hawks. The meshing of these three threads was captivating and certainly more interesting than another bird training novel I recall (A Kestrel for a Knave). The last few chapters felt a bit flat, otherwise this could have been a 4-star.
Review H is for Hawk by Helen Macdonald is a lot of things. I listened to the audio read by the author (she did a very good job). This book is first of all about birds, raptors and falconry. Its also a memoir of the author's period of grief after her father died. It also is a look into the life of T.H. White who wrote a book about his goshawk. Much like the author, I've always had an interest in falconry. I wanted to own a falcon but I never was as focused and determined as the author so I've not every gone after my dream as she has. One could say she was obsessed with falconry as a child. This book is shelved in the 500s (598.944) and it gives the reader a great deal of information about hawks, raptors, falconry and training. It has also been tagged as autobiography, biography and memoir. The author's father died unexpectedly. It is the story of her grief which she tells through the training of her hawk. I do think people find things like training hawks to help them get through grief. It reminded me of The Year of Magical Thinking though they are very different but both books gives a picture of going through grief. Finally, I really learned a lot about T. H. White. Maybe more than I care to know. White wrote The Goshawk. White had an unhappy childhood, was an unhappy young man and a unhappy school teacher. He failed miserably in training his Goshawk. The author rereads his book during this time of grief and training her own Goshawk. She reflects on Merlin and his living backwards, his past was always before him.