Daniel Pratt Mannix IV was best known as an American author and journalist. His life was remarkably different from other writers of his generation. His career included times as a side show performer, magician, trainer of eagles and film maker.
The Grest Zadma was a stage name Mannix used as a magician. He also entertained as a sword swallower and fire eater in a traveling carnival sideshow. Magazine articles about these experiences, co-written with his wife, became very popular in 1944 and 1945.
As an author Mannix covered a wide variety of subject matter. His more than 25 books ranged from fictional animal stories for children, the natural history of animals, and adventurous accounts about hunting big game to sensational adult non-fiction topics such as a biography of the occultist Aleister Crowley, sympathetic accounts of carnival performers and sideshow freaks, and works describing, among other things, the Hellfire Club, the Atlantic slave trade, the history of torture, and the Roman games. His output of essays and articles was extensive.
This was an amazing book that described the lives of both a fighting cock, and a hunting hawk. It went into great detail to describe the intracies of the barnyard chickens and the predatory Cooper's hawk. The book does not take sides to show either as right or wrong, but goes to show daily struggle of each to stay alive.
The rooster is a game cock specifically bred for the sport of fighting, and that is one of the more interesting portions. He escapes the ring and takes up life in a farmyard, where he is the guardian of the flock.
The hawk is raised in the wild, and each day is a struggle for her to survive.
These are the killers. This book is well worth a second or even a third read.
Serving as an avian mirror to Mannix’s magnum opus, The Killers centers on the long-running rivalry between a retired fighting rooster and a wild Cooper’s hawk. Eschewing The Fox and the Hound’s focus on tracking and pursuit to instead center on the violent struggle for supremacy, this novel features the two leads coming together in a series of battles that give the story the qualities of an action thriller while shying from the environmentalist messaging that made its predecessor such a powerful novel. [7/10]
Thanks to a group of librarians on Facebook, I was able to find this book that I first read in the early 1970s. I've looked for it on and off since then, fearing that my memory of the book was going to be better than the book itself. But that turned out not to be true. Mannix does a remarkable job of blending natural history, animal husbandry, and a simple farming life into a story of two fighting birds, quite different from one another, from birth through the first few years of their lives. You are entertained while learning. I know a great deal about the game chicken world, though I've never been part of it, and he never strikes a false note.
I read this on a whim one day and it has since become my favorite book. It blends realism and creative liberty in a way that makes me absolutely love it.
This is classified as animal fiction and I am not sure how I ended up with this book. In any case, it held me enthralled for several happy days. If I could find more books that were this well written, I would read the genre more often. There is nothing here that is remotely cute, and no attempt to make the characters think and act like people. One of the two main characters is a fighting game cock, but he escapes to a Mennonite farm early in the book, so coverage of that brutal sport is brief. The wild hawk is a female Cooper's hawk whose territory includes the farm where the game cock has found a home. There are many interesting observations about how the different species interact and are dependent on one another. Recommended to anyone who enjoys reading about the natural world with 5 stars 🌟.
This one caught my eye because it was written by the author of the Fox and the Hound (which I admit I have never read, but it was a favorite movie of mine when I was little). While it is technically a work of fiction, this is really more a natural history of the domestic rooster and the Cooper's hawk. It follows the life of a fighting cock and a female hawk over the course of a few years, where their lives intersect on a few occasions. Anthropomorphizing is kept to a bare minimum. Mannix really is just giving names to two completely natural birds with realistic animal personalities. This can make it somewhat dry for long stretches, I'm almost tempted to classify it as non-fiction. It was kind of fun recognizing the specific studies he refers to when he describes a moment (such as the rooster not recognizing the hawk inside the coop because it was not the short-necked, long-tailed, forward-moving silhouette birds naturally react to) -- he has done his research on top of clearly having a personal understanding of the animals involved. I learned a lot of interesting tidbits about the training of fighting cocks which I'd never encountered before. I also have to give him credit for detailing every single move in every single fight throughout the book -- I think he has outdone any swashbuckling adventure author I've read.