
The Boy
Who Drew Birds:
A Story of John James Audubon
ISBN: 0-618-24343-7 • 32 pages
$15.00 • Ages 7–12
Houghton Mifflin
Young John James
could skate, hunt, and ride better than most boys. He could fiddle,
he could flirt, he could fence. But what he liked to do best, from sunup
to sundown, was watch birds. And so he does, in this strange new world
called America, where John James is both a foreigner and alone. Soon
he befriends a pair of phoebe birds and finds himself asking some ancient,
unanswered questions: Where do birds go in the winter? Will the same
birds return to the same nest in the spring? John James employs frontier
ingenuity to prove once and for all that phoebe birds return to their
nests each spring.
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Recognition
for The Boy Who Drew Birds:
• Nominated
for the Young Hoosier Book Award Program 2007–08 in the Intermediate Category.
• Junior
Library Guild Selection
• Nominated
for a Capitol Choice award (www.capitolchoices.org)
• Outstanding
Science Trade Book for Students K-12 for 2005. This is a cooperative
project of the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) and the
Children's Book Council.
• Added
to the prestigious John Burroughs List of Nature Books for Young Readers.
The List recognizes outstanding natural history books for children
that contain perceptive and artistic accounts of direct experiences
in the world of nature.
• Selected
for the New York Public Library's Best Books for 2004 list, "100
Titles for Reading and Sharing."
Reviews
This beautifully
illustrated book focuses on the young John Audubon's interest in migrating
birds and depicts his attempts to determine whether some birds return
to the same nest each spring. This story of a young child's first scientific
investigation hints at the curiosity and wonder that would make Audubon
the greatest illustrator of birds. The narrative is suitable for reading
aloud or for independent enjoyment for middle-grade students. The book
nicely blends historical information with a description of the process
a naturalist goes through to investigate a "mystery" of nature.
In the classroom, it would prompt some great discussions of the traits
that characterize a good scientist. This is one of the 2005 NSTA/CBC
award-winning tradebooks.—Coralee Smith, The National Science
Teachers Association
The Boy Who
Drew Birds focuses on the year young John James Audubon spent alone
at his father's farm in Pennsylvania, wondering if the small birds nesting
nearby would return the following spring....Jacqueline Davies's prose
is sprightly and evocative throughout...Davies tells the story of his
year of close observation and makes it exciting and engaging....a lovely
introduction to the life and work of an extraordinary man.—Liz
Rosenberg, The Boston Globe
This delicately
illustrated books shows the Haitian-born Audubon as an 18-year-old in
Pennsylvania, already crazed about birds and clearly more interested
in watching them in the wild than studying them in books....Davies does
full justice to this tale of intellectual precocity and single-mindedness.—The
Washington Post
This winsomely
imagined account of an episode when Audubon was 18 years old joins the
flocks of commemorative works. Davies's narration...[provides a] tight,
appealing focus on a lonely, bird-obsessed young man whose perfectionism
led him to burn his artwork every year and who burned to demystify the
migratory habits of small birds. Sweet's illustrations soar, incorporating
mixed-media collage into her line-and-watercolor paintings in a gloriously
eclectic mélange that evokes both the time and Audubon's scientific
enthusiasms. A solid offering...—Kirkus Reviews, starred
review
Though best known
for his precise ornithological paintings, Audubon was also distinguished
for scientific curiosity, as dramatized in this slightly fictionalized
account of an incident from the French boy's earliest time in the United
States. No one knew in the early 1800s what became of songbirds in the
winter; scientists' unfounded theories included Aristotle's guess that
they "hibernated under water," while some of Audubon's contemporaries
"believed that birds transformed from one kind into another."
Though knowledge concerning actual migration paths would await another
century, Audubon postulated that the same birds returned each spring
and proved it by banding phoebe nestlings with silver thread and finding
them, months later, nesting near their natal site. Melissa Sweet's relaxed
watercolor style and skillful incorporation of collage, plus a lively
narration that illuminates Audubon's passion for observation and sets
his pivotal insight into context, make this appealing vignette a fine
introduction to his work. Author and illustrator source notes and a
bibliography are appended.—Horn Book
OK, so maybe the
famous bird painter wasn't your typical guy. Something of a "cracked
pot," was how the housekeeper who cared for the French teen after
his arrival in the United States described him. "Birds! Always
birds!" A failure in school, Audubon spent long hours outside studying
his feathered friends, eager to become an expert naturalist. Along the
way, he showed that Aristotle was wrong—small birds didn't spend
the winter under water or curled up in hollow logs. The first North
American to band a bird, Audubon helped prove the theory of small-bird
migration. And, or course, his glorious paintings show that even a cracked
pot can fly high.—U.S.
News & World Report
The story opens
with 18-year-old French naturalist John James Audubon roaming Pennsylvania
countryside in search of birds. In an effort to determine whether individual
birds return to the same nests in the spring, he uses silver thread
to band some fledgling pewee flycatchers. He observes them as they grow
through the summer, leave for the winter, and return the following year.
An appended historical note explains that Audubon was the first person
in North America to band a bird and that Audubon became "the greatest
painter of birds of all time," while a source note details which
parts of the story are based on speculation, and an illustrator's note
comments on research, inspiration, and technique. Sweet's mixed-media
collage artwork includes sensitive pencil sketches and ink drawings
washed with watercolors and gouache, as well as elements such as photos
of bird nests and bones. A good companion to Jennifer Armstrong's picture-book
biography Audubon (2003), which relates several incidents in
the painter's later life, this handsome book makes a beguiling introduction
to the painter.—Booklist
This
readable account focuses on a short period in the famous naturalist's
youth. Audubon, who was born and raised in France, was sent to America
at age 18 to avoid service in Napoleon's army. Living in his father's
farmhouse in Pennsylvania, he roamed the countryside and observed nature.
His interest in birds and their migration habits led him to watch a
family of pewee flycatchers (Eastern Phoebes) that nested in a limestone
cave nearby. In order to determine whether the same creatures returned
each year, he banded the young birds with silver thread before they
flew south in autumn, providing a means of identification when they
returned in spring. Davies relates how the self-taught painter and ornithologist
combined his artistic talent and keen skills of observation to produce
detailed, life-sized portraits of birds "alive and moving."
Sweet's extensive research is evident in her carefully crafted, mixed-media
artwork, which includes photos of found objects, re-created pages from
a nature sketchbook, maps, and watercolor paintings of young Audubon
in the rolling Pennsylvania countryside. Students writing reports can
find further information in Peter Anderson's John James Audubon: Wildlife
Artist (Sagebrush, 1996). The Boy Who Drew Birds is a wonderful and
accessible introduction to a man who made a great impact on the science
of ornithology. (Susan Scheps, Shaker Heights Public Library, OH) —School
Library Journal