Thursday, March 20, 2014

Parrots Over Puerto Rico

 

Parrots Over Puerto Rico
by Susan Roth and Cindy Trumbore
collages by Susan Roth

The first thing you notice about this book is that there is no title on the cover. It is a bold display of three bright parrots, a collage of cut paper so textured you can practically feel the feathers, almost imagine the birds flying off the page.

When you open the book, the orientation is lengthwise, giving an impression of height and depth, perfect for the setting of this story of near extinction. You can sit with the parrots in the treetops, soar with them in the blue green sky, get a bird's eye view of village life in 5000 BCE.

This book chronicles the birds' demise, from their original habitat, to them being hunted for food, given as gifts to royalty, battling against red-tailed hawks, and then fighting for survival against other predators brought to the island by settlers. They lost their homes to people who needed the trees to build their own dwellings and kept being edged out bit by bit. In 5000 BCE there were hundreds of thousands of them. By 1967 only 24 remained.

This is their story as well as the story of bringing them back, and a short history of Puerto Rico, to boot, all in one gorgeous, small, readable and engrossing book. There is an afterward about the Puerto Rican Parrot Recovery Program, a timeline of Puerto Rican History and the parrots, an extensive bibliography, and pictures you could look at forever.

What more could you want in a book? Available in the library!

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