A showdown ensues between a bird of prey and a barnyard rooster in this masterpiece of nature fiction from the author of The Fox and the Hound.
Whitehackle comes from a long line of fighting cocks, but exceeds expectations as he rises to the top of the pecking order. His reputation grows when he chases off a fox and attacks a hawk in gallant defense of one his hens. The arrogant rooster is now king of the barnyard, but the hawk still circles above . . .
A female Coopers hawk, Ishmael, has few natural enemies. Life itself is her greatest foeand survive she must, to mate and nest and raise her young. Even a gunshot cant stop this courageous birdyet she may have met her match in Whitehackle . . .
The day-to-day life of hawk and rooster collide in a fragile environment encroached upon by modern forces in a story of predationboth animal and human.
A very compelling tale. . . . Mannix, who has spent most of his life near and with animals, treads it with a sure foot and a clear-eyed unsentimental approach. Like the nature he writes about, he makes no apologies and asks no special indulgenceand he writes a very readable book. Sports Illustrated
Mannix shifts back and forth between natural enemies, dramatizing but not fictionalizing their life experiences in thoroughly entertaining information writing. . . . Hes combined a mass of wild bird lore with a coopful of material on the complex social structure and behavior patterns of domestic poultry. Bet your nestegg on it. Kirkus Reviews