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Return to the Sky

The Surprising Story of How One Woman and Seven Eaglets Helped Restore the Bald Eagle

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
“Three cheers for this splendid, surprising, inspiring book!”—Sy Montgomery, author of The Soul of an Octopus

Alone in a vast wildlife refuge with little direction and no experience, a Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology student found herself responsible for a project of historical importance—to bring the Bald Eagle back from near extinction.
In Return to the Sky, Tina Morris, one of the first women to engage in a raptor reintroduction program, shares her remarkable story that is as much about the human spirit as it is about birds of prey.
In the spring of 1975, on the eve of the US Bicentennial, Tina was selected to reintroduce Bald Eagles into New York State in the hope that the species could eventually repopulate eastern North America. Young and female in a male-dominated field, Tina was handed an assignment to rehabilitate a population that had been devastated by the effects of DDT. The challenges were prodigious—there was no model to emulate for a bird of the eagle’s size, for one—but Tina soon found that her own path to self-discovery and confidence-building was deeply connected with the survival of the species she was chosen to protect.
Ultimately, Tina spent two years playing “mother” to seven eaglets at Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge, east of Seneca Falls in New York. Driven by her passion, she discovered unknown reserves of patience, determination, and grit.
At a time when the mass extinction of bird species is a critical global topic, Return to the Sky reminds us how, with a mix of common sense, resilience, and resolve, humans can be effective stewards of the natural world.

“Inspiring . . . [and] proof that one determined person can still make a difference. At a time when the mass extinction of bird species is a critically important global topic, Dr Morris reminds us that humans can still be effective guardians of the natural world.”—Forbes


“Emotional and inspiring proof that one person can make a difference.”—Kirkus Reviews


“Inspiring . . . the writing is clear and eloquent . . . Morris expertly blends moving memoir and scientific research in this remarkable and affecting story.”—Booklist
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    • Booklist

      September 1, 2024
      In this inspiring memoir, Morris reflects on her role in reintroducing eagles to New York State in 1975. Over the course of two years, she created a program with little guidance and no model. She used ingenuity to solve issues such as feeding eaglets by catching carp and finding roadkill. As a young woman, her role endured much scrutiny as women were rare in raptor research. The writing is clear and eloquent when she, for example, describes the self-doubt she experienced working alone, solely responsible for the survival of the young chicks. A handful of images appears in the book, including archival photos of the project site and the ceremony where Morris was honored by the Iroquois Nation for her work. Morris' love and respect for animals and the natural world, whether for her two dogs, the eaglets, or the wildlife in her backyard, resonate throughout. The text concludes with her return to the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge in 2022. Morris expertly blends moving memoir and scientific research in this remarkable and affecting story of the power of one person to make a difference.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2024
      A memoir by the Cornell student who helped restore the endangered bald eagle. In 1976, as the United States celebrated its bicentennial, Morris found herself alone on a hilltop at the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge near Seneca Falls, New York, playing "Mother Eagle" to two bald eaglets. She had been selected to participate in a program to reintroduce bald eagles into the state. Following the ravaging effects on the species by hunting, habitat destruction, and DDT, "restoring the eagle was symbolic of a nation seeking to right a wrong by avowing its commitment to the environment and to the bird who manifested freedom and resilience." The bald eagle in the lower 48 states had declined from about 400,000 birds in the 1800s to only 417 nesting pairs by midcentury. As Morris notes, "The 1970s were a time of awakening when environmental threats to water, air, and wildlife became rallying cries across college campuses and in the halls of government." Although she had fantasized about an opportunity such as this, she found herself emotionally unprepared for it; she shares the fear and uncertainty that plagued her during this time. Following the success of the program, Morris describes the joy she felt when she was honored by the Iroquois during a meeting with the chiefs of the Six Nation Confederacy for her efforts to bring back the bald eagle. Morris goes on to detail events since those two summers on the hilltop, after which her life took a different trajectory: the uncertainty that has continued to haunt her and the circumstances that kept her away for the next 45 years. She closes with a moving account of her return to Montezuma in 2022, finding the eagles firmly established as "the iconic brand of the refuge." Emotional and inspiring proof that one person can make a difference.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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