Katie Fallon is co-founder of the Avian Conservation Center of Appalachia, a nonprofit research, education, and rehabilitation center for injured birds. A member of the International Association of Avian Trainers and Educators, she has glove-trained a wide variety of raptor species, including turkey vultures, hawks, owls, and falcons. She is the author, previously, of Cerulean Blues: A Personal Search for a Vanishing Songbird. She lives in West Virginia with her family of human and birds.
[A]n excellent quick read, suitable not only for bird lovers and naturalists but for anyone with a bit of natural curiosity and an inclination to root for the common, the misunderstood, and the underdog. -- Birding Magazine A heartfelt and authoritative account of the world's most numerous and misunderstood avian scavenger. Writing in a style reminiscent of Edward Abbey and John McPhee, Fallon successfully captures the natural history of the species and its ability to succeed in both natural and man-made landscapes. Destined to change the mind of anyone who reads it. --Keith L. Bildstein, Sarkis Acopian Director of Conservation Science at Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Katie Fallon, who writes with elegance, humor, and restraint, tells the lost stories of the vulture tribe. This book will fill you with wonder. --David Gessner, author of All The Wild That Remains: Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, and the American West This is a book that begged to be written. . . . Fallon allows that the study of flying turkey vultures is akin to meditation. Rarely hurried, coursing the heavens like a setter seeks quail, this most widespread of North American vultures invites both contemplation and envy. . . . A book as inspired as the bird that is its focus. --Pete Dunne, New Jersey Audubon's ambassador for birding and author of The Wind Masters: The Lives of North American Birds of Prey Who would have suspected the astonishments of vultures? Katie Fallon has given us an ingenious, funny, delightful book. --Janisse Ray, author of Ecology of a Cracker Childhood Fallon truly loves these skillful gliders, and she hopes that readers will see the light. Every time I've seen a vulture this year, this book has come to mind, so I guess I'm hooked. -- The Exponent Telegram Entertaining, well-researched. . . . [Fallon] displays great passion and enthusiasm yet writes knowingly and dispassionately on the science of her subject in an engaging, literary style. -- Library Journal Fallon's personal accounts of her field experiences are engrossing and entertaining. . . . Recommended. -- Choice Fallon shines a bright light on this clan of sadly unloved birds, which are not only vitally important ecologically, but are also among the most imperiled avian groups on the planet. Vulture is an overdue love letter to a bird that deserves far better than we've given it. --Scott Weidensaul, author of Living on the Wind Through thorough research, interviews, and firsthand experience, Fallon establishes unquestionable credibility; however, it is her own narrative writing and descriptive skills that make Vulture a book that is not only educational and inspiring, but readable and entertaining. -- The Los Angeles Review