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Reviews tagging 'Animal death'
Sobre las alas del mundo, Audubon by Jérémie Royer, Fabien Grolleau
3 reviews
webmarn's review against another edition
adventurous
informative
fast-paced
2.75
Nicely illustrated, but it definitely ignores much of the complicated history of Audubon's life. He owned slaves and actively supported white supremacy. I enjoyed learning about the other aspects of his life, but was disappointed that these topics were glossed over, especially since they are clearly addressed by the Audubon Society itself
Minor: Animal death, Child death, Slavery, Dementia, and Colonisation
eamily's review against another edition
adventurous
informative
medium-paced
3.5
Graphic: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Blood, and Colonisation
Moderate: Racism, Slavery, and Abandonment
Minor: Death, Gore, Gun violence, Self harm, Violence, Medical content, Dementia, Pregnancy, and Injury/Injury detail
poemsandponds's review against another edition
adventurous
medium-paced
2.75
It's interesting that Audubon displays an almost manic desire to catalog and record all the species of America's birds before they disappear due to rapid overdevelopment, which is an urgency that feels very present in today's world two hundred later.
Going into this, I thought I would be reading about someone who adored nature and wanted to protect it. However, while reading this it seems like there was so much needless slaughter of animals.
The way Indigenous and enslaved Black people are portrayed here leaves much to be desired. This story was an idealized, sanitized version of Audubon's life, and I feel that giving it this treatment does a disservice to readers. Instead, it would've been better to take a critical look at colonial attitudes (towards people and land) and how conservation has changed, acknowledging both topics instead of treating them as a footnote on Audubon's "quest to greatness".
Going into this, I thought I would be reading about someone who adored nature and wanted to protect it. However, while reading this it seems like there was so much needless slaughter of animals.
The way Indigenous and enslaved Black people are portrayed here leaves much to be desired. This story was an idealized, sanitized version of Audubon's life, and I feel that giving it this treatment does a disservice to readers. Instead, it would've been better to take a critical look at colonial attitudes (towards people and land) and how conservation has changed, acknowledging both topics instead of treating them as a footnote on Audubon's "quest to greatness".
Graphic: Animal death
Moderate: Racism and Slavery