Gene Stratton-Porter Shares Her Love of Nature with the World
Review posted May 11, 2024.
Calkins Creek, 2024. 44 pages.
Review written April 30, 2024, from a library book.
Starred Review
Bird Girl is a picture book biography of Gene Stratton-Porter. Many years ago, I read A Girl of the Limberlost, and I expected the story of her life as an author. Instead, the book told about her fascination with studying and caring for birds and her groundbreaking work as a nature photographer who photographed birds in their natural settings.
And then I remembered that I learned from her novels how important it is for farmers to leave trees on the edges of their fields - because then birds will help them eliminate pests. And that was only a bit of the nature lore in her novels.
The book is bright and colorful and uses entertaining anecdotes to tell the story. When she was a girl, she hid a hawk's droppings from her farmer father so he wouldn't know where the nest was and kill it. Later, when he did shoot down a hawk, she took care of it and befriended it until its wing healed.
As an adult, Gene Stratton-Porter had a house with a conservatory that had windows with special hatches so birds could come and go, and she kept food for birds throughout her house.
She began photographing birds because the illustrations a magazine wanted to use for her stories were drawings of stuffed birds in unnatural positions. She learned to photograph and develop her own film - and then she went out into the nearby Limberlost swamp to take the pictures.
She fights through spongy muck and tangled undergrowth - rattlesnake territory - to reach the hollow tree where a vulture nests. She goes back time and again to capture the world's first photo series of a growing vulture chick.
She ended up with a vast knowledge of wildlife acquired through patient observation that began when she was a child. And her story shows kids the power of a quirky obsession.