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Word: hawk (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...HAWK IS DYING...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Beak and Wing | 4/2/1973 | See Source »

This gleefully savage little novel introduces fiction's most dedicated bird freak since Augie March swept through Mexico with an eagle in tow. George Gattling, an otherwise sober, hardworking owner of an auto-seatcover business in Gainesville, Fla., is determined to train a red-tailed chicken hawk, which he keeps perched on his wrist. Frequently consulting his talismanic text, The Art of Falconry by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, George croons to the hawk, fasts when it fasts, even takes it with him when he goes to bed with his girl friend...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Beak and Wing | 4/2/1973 | See Source »

...Southern Gothic remnants who make up his family and friends. As George passes through a series of farcial set pieces (a woozy pot-smoking session at a residence for Florida State University students, a ghastly 4 a.m. confrontation with an embalmer in a mortuary), everything except the hawk seems to him as phony as his girl friend's orgasms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Beak and Wing | 4/2/1973 | See Source »

Crews works too hard to make the quasi-symbolic figure of the hawk dominate the book. When the bird is finally trained, Crews' assertion that George has achieved harmony with "some immutable continuity" rings more of rhetoric than of convincing fiction. But much of the time Crews maintains the kind of control that extracts full shock value from an episode while at the same time making it seem hilarious. George's retarded 22-year-old nephew Fred, for example, falls asleep while smoking in his waterbed and somehow manages to drown. · Christopher Porterfield

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Beak and Wing | 4/2/1973 | See Source »

...fiction rack. A glance at the titles before the salesman slipped the two slim tomes into a bag seemed a clue. If the titles did not exactly tell a tale, they hinted at one. Steele, ever the mild-mannered, wild blond-haired, slight-of-limb, mightily-muscled, bespectacled young hawk, tucked his new bought copies of Deliverance and On the Road into his duffel and skittered through the traffic to the ski room in Wigglesworth. In a few moments, he and coach Peter Carter would be headed to the airport with their skis...

Author: By Timothy Carlson, | Title: Steele, Carter Trade Harvard's Halls For Runs on Yonder Western Slopes | 3/30/1973 | See Source »

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