海角大神

Doing what comes naturally: The elegance and danger of hawks

In 鈥淭he Hawk鈥檚 Way,鈥 Sy Montgomery comes to love birds of prey, admiring their fierce intelligence and witnessing their predatory instincts. 

"The Hawk鈥檚 Way: Encounters with Fierce Beauty," by Sy Montgomery, Atria Books, 2022.

June 9, 2022

Bestselling author Sy Montgomery鈥檚 slim new book, 鈥淭he Hawk鈥檚 Way: Encounters with Fierce Beauty,鈥 began life as a chapter in the author鈥檚 2010 book 鈥淏irdology.鈥 It鈥檚 presented here by Atria Books as an elegant little illustrated booklet on its own. Montgomery, whose 2010 book 鈥淭he Soul of an Octopus鈥 made her a favorite of animal-book readers, turns her formidable descriptive passion to hawks, and to the world of falconry.

The starting point of the book is Montgomery鈥檚 tutelage by experienced New Hampshire falconer Nancy Cowan, who died at the beginning of 2022 (the book is dedicated to her memory). From Cowan, Montgomery learned the strange terminology of falconry 鈥 jonking, feaking, mantling, and so on 鈥 and was introduced to some of the world鈥檚 300 species of avian daytime predators, the hawks, eagles, falcons, harriers, kites, and so on she refers to as 鈥渢he tigers of the air.鈥

Hawks are pure predators, carnivores who live for hunting, and their skills at finding, flushing, and killing their prey has made them prized hunting partners for humans in many cultures for millennia (as Montgomery points out, the humans are very much the junior partners in the arrangement). For our author, they represent an icy kind of beauty, 鈥減ure savagery bereft of evil.鈥

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Montgomery, a long-time vegetarian, keeper of chickens, and a hunter's daughter who foregoes hunting herself, immediately sees the irony. That she, of all people, would enter the world of falconry, where the humans involved use a combination of hunting dogs and falcons to find and kill prey, appears to be a contradiction. She's aware that falconry might well consume her life and her family (not to mention, quite literally, her chickens), but she feels a passionate pull towards the subject.

Sy Montgomery is the author of "The Hawk鈥檚 Way: Encounters with Fierce Beauty."

She鈥檚 also drawn to the awesome, forbidding nature of the birds themselves, as she watches Cowan鈥檚 Harris鈥 hawks, meets other birds, and learns their ways. Hawks, she realizes, aren鈥檛 in any sense pets. They don鈥檛 want to be touched, even if their human handler has raised them from a hatchling, and they can be incredibly intolerant of mistakes or discourtesies. 鈥淎 hawk will not come to your rescue if you鈥檙e in trouble,鈥 Montgomery writes with only a touch of sarcasm. 鈥淎 hawk will not comfort you when you are sad.鈥

As usual in anything by this author, there are many digressions about the often ineffable, alien quality of the intelligences she鈥檚 encountering. One of the most memorable strands running through 鈥淭he Soul of an Octopus鈥 was the description of how strange and equal cephalopods are alongside humans, and the same thing happens repeatedly in 鈥淭he Hawk鈥檚 Way.鈥 鈥淏irds are wild in a way that we don鈥檛 experience in our relationships with our fellow mammals,鈥 Montgomery writes. 鈥淎nd nothing, I found, brings one closer to the pure wildness of birds than working with a hawk.鈥

Of course, you can鈥檛 work with hunting birds without engaging in hunting. Readers who share Montgomery鈥檚 original empathy and compassion for animals might want to proceed cautiously. The protracted, dramatic set-piece that serves as the book鈥檚 climax is Montgomery鈥檚 evocative description of a field hunt, which includes 鈥渓aunching鈥 of captive quails as prey for the hawks. 鈥淭here is nothing more innocent and appealing than a quail, with its rounded profile and soft brown plumage and black button eyes,鈥 she writes. 鈥淚n their pet carrier, the two birds are still as stones, their stillness a fervent prayer that we somehow won鈥檛 see them.鈥 Montgomery watches as quails are flung into the air. One of Montgomery鈥檚 fundamental points is that anybody who decides to enter the world of falconry must be prepared for this kind of cruelty, but it鈥檚 still tough to read.

Fortunately, there鈥檚 plenty of compensation. The book breathes with glorious prose and challenging insights into a very strange world. In 鈥淭he Hawk鈥檚 Way,鈥 Sy Montgomery and her publisher have crafted a sharp little gem of a book, something fit to stand with classics like T.H. White鈥檚 鈥淭he Goshawk鈥 or Helen Macdonald鈥檚 鈥淗 is for Hawk.鈥 The next time any reader catches a glimpse of a hawk soaring over a field or highway, they鈥檒l think of this little book and feel an extra shiver of wonder.