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______________________________________________________________________________ NEW YORK TIMES ________________________________________________________________________ NEWSWEEK
From Publishers Weekly Featuring similarly spare paintings as Jeanette Winters's The Tale of Pale Male: A True Story, McCarthy's (Aliens Are Coming!) book covers much of the same turfand air spaceas that spring release. McCarthy concisely chronicles the true, reportedly unprecedented occurrence of two red-tailed hawks' construction of a nest in the cornice of a swanky apartment building on Manhattan's Upper East Side. From nearby Central Park, a group of bird-watchers who called themselves the Regulars vigilantly followed Pale Male and Lola's every move and rejoiced when two chicks hatched. The other headline-grabbing aspect of these hawks' tale—the building's residents, irked by the birds' messy habits, successfully lobbied to get the nest removed, then, in response to passionate protests, reversed their decision—is explained in a lengthy author's note. Combining vibrant and earth tones, McCarthy's unadorned acrylic illustrations have a puckish quality, both her human and winged characters incarnated as amiable bug-eyed creatures who express themselves through the slant of their mouths (or tilt of their beaks). A portion of the proceeds from sales of this book will benefit New York City Audubon. Ages 4-8. (Sept.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From The Horn Book Here's yet another account of the stir created when New York City's red-tailed hawks nested high on an upscale facade overlooking Central Park (see also Jeanette Winter's Tale of Pale Male, rev. 3/07). Where Winter's book was concerned with the birds' needs and behavior, McCarthy focuses on the city and its people. "After Pale Male was sighted near a pond in Central Park, flying over the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and by a hot-dog stand, it was clear that he was there to stay." Omitting the drama of the building owners' removal of the nest and its reinstatement, she details the delight of faithful birdwatchers, depicting them (rather comically) as pop-eyedas are her hawks. The liveliness of these caricatures and McCarthy's rouggh yet evocative rendering of the city contrast significantly with Winter's elegant stylized forms; many libraries may wish to have both books. City Hawk includes a lengthy bibliography, havy on newspaper accounts; a page of information about Central Park; and a long author's note that extends both the natural and the social history. J.R.L ______________________________________________________________________________
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