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Maria's Duck Tails: Wildlife Stories From My Garden
Maria Daddino, 2011
Llumina Press
108 pp.
ISBN-13: 9781605943411



Summary
Happy, sad, and at times a little whimsical, Maria's Duck Tales: Wildlife Stories From My Garden is a collection of short stories of the sometimes complicated, sometimes heart-breaking but always enriching relationship between a woman and the wildlife who call her garden home.

Sharing her observations and interactions with the wild ducks, swans, opossums, ospreys and squirrels of Penataquit  Creek, the stories are interwoven with fascinating facts about wildlife and insights into communicating with and understanding our wild friends. Maria's poignant and heartwarming memoirs, as well as the unique bond that she shares with her garden visitors, are, at times, touching, delightful, comical and heartrending. (From the author.)


Author Bio
Birth—ca. 1940s
Where—Brooklyn, New York, USA
Education—B.A., Saint John's University
Awards—See below
Currently—lives in East Quogue, New York


Maria Daddino is the multiple award-winning author of Maria’s Duck Tales: Wildlife Stories From my Garden, a heartwarming and poignant memoir about a very extraordinary time in her life and the special creatures who became her “wild-friends.”

The author grew up in the 1940’s in Brooklyn, New York, attended Saint John’s University and now lives in a charming little hamlet on the magnificent East End of Long Island. Deer, turkeys, pheasants, egrets, herons, squirrels, opossums and glorious wild birds, brilliant in their feathered plumage, call her native wildlife garden home. Her extensive native and natural garden, certified as a wildlife habitat by the National Wildlife Federation and as a monarch waystation by Monarch Watch, has been on display in several East End garden tours. She also works closely with local wildlife organizations and regularly holds private tours with them in her garden to discuss ways of providing wildlife habitat in beautiful garden settings.

Maria writes a weekly community column, “From Fourth Neck,” for the Western Edition of The Southampton Press. Her essays have appeared in The Press Box in both the Eastern and Western Editions of The Southampton Press, as well as in The Press of Manorville and Moriches. Her wildlife stories have also appeared in the South Shore Monthly, the Great South Bay Magazine and In the Eyes of the Wild: An Anthology of Wildlife Poetry and Short Stories.

Maria’s wildlife garden has been featured in all editions of The Southampton Press. She has appeared on LTV’s The Writer’s Dream, as well as on The Authors Show. Maria has also spoken of the joys of her wildlife garden on several radio shows, most recently, The Backyard Network on KRAE, Cheyenne, Wy.

Maria lives in East Quogue with her collie Christie, her parrot Pablo and all of her “wild-friends." (From the author.)

Awards
IndieReader Discovery Awards Winner (Environment)
National Indie Excellence Book Awards Winner (Nature)
Global eBook Awards Winner (Animals/ Pets)
Readers Favorite Award ~ Silver (Animals)
New York Book Festival Runner-Up (eBooks)
Green Book Festival Runner-Up (Animals)
International Book Awards Finalist (Animals/Pets: General)
International Book Awards Finalist (E-Book Autobiography/Biography/Memoirs)
Los Angeles Book Festival First Honorable Mention (Non-Fiction)
San Francisco Book Festival First Honorable Mention (Non-Fiction)
Beach Book Festival Honorable Mention (Non-Fiction)
Readers Favorite Award Finalist (Humor)
Readers Favorite Award (General Non-Fiction)

Visit the author's website.


Book Reviews
Maria's Duck Tales: Wildlife Stories from My Garden is a collection of memories from Maria Daddino as she presents animal tales from her home and gardens, with a touch of humor and poignancy. Duck Tales is a strong pick for wildlife-themed memoir collections, recommended.
Midwest Book Review


One of the nice things about being a columnist is receiving notification from various good people in the animal world about books, services and events that provide a shining light on animals and illustrate how much we love them.

In April, I received a message from a reader on Long Island, New York who describes herself as a "wildlife advocate." Her "...passions are native gardening and wildlife." While her "challenge is having the two peacefully co-exist in the same garden!" This is a wildlife advocate who recognizes that humans and animals should peacefully co-exist and respect the fact that each share this land.

Maria Daddino is also a columnist, writing a weekly community column, "From Fourth Neck," for the western edition of The Southampton Press. Last year, she wrote Maria's Duck Tales "... a collection of short stories of the sometimes complicated, sometimes heart-breaking but always enriching relationship between a woman and the wildlife who call her garden home."

We must confess that we haven't yet finished reading this book, but what we have read is both delightful and heartwarming. It is so refreshing to read about someone who values visits by wildlife in her yard instead of complaining about any perceived havoc they may cause. From her book Maria writes, "I always enjoyed sitting on my terrace in Bay Shore, delighting in the beauty of my garden and the antics of my wild-friends.... I felt so privileged that year to have shared in such an extraordinary gift of nature and I will always remember the exhilaration I felt as I watched a very special pair of young ospreys soar high into the warm summer sky."

Note use of the word "privileged" to describe her experience with wildlife. It is indeed a privilege for humans to co-exist with animals and to share in the experience of life by watching their integration with the world around them. How often have you watched birds flock to feeders in your backyard or squirrels scurry up a fence to feast on peanuts and corn? It is indeed mesmerizing for those who respect the beauty of wildlife and the fascination they are to watch. As Maria writes, "I was thrilled to be part of a cutting-edge community that cherished the bounty of the land and the opulence of its wildlife."

Maria's stories both educate and warm our hearts to recognize the endless joy, amusement and sometimes sadness animals bring to our world. For "...her backyard wouldn't be complete without a bevy of animals–deer, pheasants and turkeys, to name a few, as well as a feral cat Ms. Daddino named Emmy Lou. Come one, come all is her policy, she said."

Give this book a read. We think you'll enjoy it.
Stephen Dickstein - Examiner.com


Maria's Duck Tales is a wonderful glimpse into the lives of the wildlife that ventured into the author's life. Each chapter is a different story about an animal that was fortunate enough to encounter Maria. Each chapter is a quick easy read that is like a breath of fresh air on a rainy day. When I first picked up the book to read I imagined that I would just be reading the observations of the wildlife that the author encountered. Instead she often goes hands-on with her wildlife friends, giving me an up close glimpse of her interactions with them. Her interactions often save the lives of the animals she encounters. While there are stories of ducks, the author also includes stories about squirrels, opossums, swans and even mentions her beloved collie a few times. I enjoyed reading how the animals would become a real part of her family. She always gave them names which made them so relatable.

As an avid fan of nature I loved this book. The author gives a true glimpse of the wildlife she encounters, but, more than that, as I read each chapter I also learned a bit about the habits of each animal—from the way they care for their babies to the foods they like to eat. The illustrations, peppered through the pages of this book, really stand out and also allow the reader a glimpse of the animal she is describing. I think any observer of nature will certainly enjoy reading this book, but I would recommend it to those who never have the opportunity to connect with nature because the author has the wonderful ability to make you feel like you are right there with her, watching the antics of the wildlife she encounters. This book is certainly a keeper for me. I plan on rereading the stories often. On a scale of one to five I would easily give this book a six because it's just that good! (5 Stars)
Brenda C. - Readers Favorite


Verdict: Maria’s Duck Tales: Wildlife Stories from my Garden is a delightful and informative, stirring set of tender and educational animal stories for nature lovers, young and old.

A collection of stories about the ducks that lived in the author’s backyard and taught her about Mother Nature’s hope and heartbreak.

Author Maria Daddino writes about her Penataquit Creek home and garden, which became a temporary home to many creatures. As the title states, many of the stories revolve around Daddino’s endearing duck visitors, like Peanuts and Patches her Muscovy ducks, and a tearful story about their encounter with a red fox. However, Daddino also opened her home to swans, ducks and geese, as observed ospreys and opossums. Her descriptions of the animals are vivid as well as educational, detailing habitats and behavior of the animals:

What I didn’t know was that opossums shared their world with the dinosaurs and that their babies are so small when they are born that twenty can fit into one teaspoon, a discovery which made me realize that most of the members of my new little opossum family were already teenagers!

The book, which includes elegant color pencil illustrations by Steve Ensign, begins with Daddino describing how she grew up in Brooklyn always had “a profound love for Mother Earth,” and was thrilled when she discovered her dream community “that cherished the bounty of the land and the opulence of its wildlife.” Here, Daddino began to work on her garden that would invite swans, geese and ducks that would become friends to Daddino and teach her about all the aspects of Mother Nature. As Daddino prepares her garden she gives the reader a hint that the changing seasons bring a foreboding of sadness:

Nothing compares to the lushness of my summer garden, the fragrances of oriental lilies and roses, the early morning dew on the grass, the sweet tastes of vine-ripened heirloom tomatoes and freshly-picked raspberries and the gentle warmth that emanates from the soil. The vivid oranges, yellows and browns of a fall woodland strike a chord deep in my soul but, as I watch the falling leaves, I am overcome with a sense of sadness as I think of the long, dark days ahead.

Daddino manages to highlight the painful paradox of nature, the ups and downs of survival in her recounting of the stories of the ducks being preyed upon by the fox, and the ducklings getting lost in the storm:

There is no more heartbreaking sight than that of a Muscovy mother looking for her babies and not finding them. Peanut looked in all their favorite places, gently cooing and clucking to them. Peanut came up to me pecking at my leg, practically begging me to join in the search.

Daddino’s choice of names for her ducks is also quite entertaining–from Robert to Bianca to Lucky to names inspired by the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal: Hillary, Monica, Gennifer, Flower, Paula and Joansie.

Daddino’s closes her chronological story with a touching dedication in the epilogue to her beloved dog, Gypsy Blue. In this epilogue, Daddino’s voice, her love and connection for Gypsy Blue, animals, nature is especially apparent and moving, and makes for a powerful close to a gratifying read.

Maria’s Duck Tales: Wildlife Stories from my Garden is a delightful and informative, stirring set of tender and educational animal stories for nature lovers, young and old. (5 Stars)
Maya Fleischmann - IndieReader.com


This endearing collection of stories takes count of the wildlife that populates Daddino’s gardens. In addition to the exploits of a few other creatures, Daddino’s first book focuses mostly on the Muscovy duck community that made its home around the creek where Daddino lived in Bay Shore, N.Y., on the southern coast of Long Island. Thanks to the balance of awe and familiarity that Daddino conveys, her relationship to the creatures is immediately compelling. From the outset, she admits to having an overwhelming love for animals but also an understanding that they should be self-sufficient. One winter, she raised squirrels in a cage in her basement, not naming them to make it easier to set them free when spring arrives. She brought the ducklings into her house to warm them on only the coldest, wettest nights, and the ospreys she marveled at from afar. While this book spotlights delightful and surprising human exchanges with the animals, external human influences create some tension: ospreys nest atop a crane in a neighboring dredging company, ducks get lost under trucks and swans leave their lovers under the docks. How Daddino manages to have a fertile garden with all these ducks around isn’t addressed until nearly the end, as an aside, which doesn’t prove too insightful. The whimsical color illustrations scattered throughout seem to be asking for a younger audience, perhaps with pared down text, bigger pages, more pictures and more attention to story. On the other hand, with more reflection and careful editing, it could make a strong memoir. Charming yet loosely connected, like random journal entries.
Kirkus Reviews


Discussion Questions
1. What do you think made a city girl from Brooklyn turn into a passionate wildlife advocate?

2. How do you think caring for the animals she writes about in her book affected the author?

3. As the relationship between the animals and the author developed, what do you think it taught her? What did it teach you?

4. If the pekin ducks continually destroyed your vegetable garden, would you have banished them? Why do you think the author didn’t?

5. It was obviously difficult for the author to release the squirrels she had nurtured in her basement through the cold winter months, would you have kept them as pets or would you have released them?

6. Why do you think that the author’s juvenile osprey visitors were so special to her?

7. Most people are afraid of swans, especially when they are protective parents raising their cygnets, why do you think the author felt that they wouldn’t harm her?

8. How would you feel if the crows and sea gulls were swooping down and capturing your ducklings? What would you do?

9. Who are your favorite characters in the book? Why?

10. How many hours a day do you think the author spent hosing down the dock and her long driveway?

11. Would you have done some of the things that the author did...like climbing from boat to boat after knee surgery or getting up in the middle of the night to protect the ducks? Why or why not?

12. What are some of the things that you learned from reading this book?
(Questions courtesy of author.)

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