BOOKS: Freeing Keiko: The Journey of a Killer Whale from Free Willy to the Wild

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2006:

Freeing Keiko: The Journey of a Killer Whale from Free Willy to the Wild
by Kenneth Brower
Penguin Group (375 Hudson St., New York, NY 10014), 2006. 288
pages, hardcover. $26.00.

Freeing Keiko is a biography of the captive orca whale who
rose to stardom as “Willy” in the Hollywood movie Free Willy! and
sequels. Author Kenneth Brower, son of the late Earth Island
Institute founder David Brower, had uniquely privileged access to
effort to rehabilitate Keiko for release, from the 1993 beginning of
Earth Island Institute negotiations to obtain Keiko from the Mexico
City aquarium El Reino Aventura until the Humane Society of the U.S.
took over the project shortly before Keiko finally broke from human
feeding and supervision in September 2002 and swam to the coast of
Norway to spend the last 15 months of his life.
Captured off Iceland in 1979, Keiko spent two years at
Marineland of Niagara Falls, Ontario. Sold to El Reino Aventura in
Mexico City, he remained there until 1996, when the Free
Willy/Keiko Foundation formed by Earth Island Institute moved him to
a newly built super-sized tank at the Oregon Coast Aquarium. More
than 2.5 million visitors came to see him before he was airlifted to
a sea pen in the Westmann Islands of Iceland in September 1998, to
learn again how to be a wild whale.

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BOOKS: Writing Green: Advocacy & Investigative Reporting About the Environment in the Early 21st Century

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2006:

Writing Green: Advocacy & Investigative Reporting About the
Environment in the Early 21st Century
by Debra Schwartz, Ph.D. Apprentice House
(www.apprenticehouse.com), 2006. 179 pages, paperback. $18.95.

In absence of animal issues specialists on the staffs of most
news media, environmental beat reporters produce about half of all
mainstream news coverage pertaining to animals, with the rest
scattered among beats including farm-and-business, general
assignment, local news, lifestyles, and even sports. Conversely,
about half of all environmental beat reporting involves animal
issues, albeit mostly pertaining to wildlife habitat and endangered
species.
Exactly half of Writing Green examines how Ocean Aware-ness
Project founder David Helvarg, Tom Meersman of the St. Paul Pioneer
Press, and Paul Rogers of the San Jose Mercury News produced
award-winning exposes of oceanic oil drilling, the impacts of
invasive species in the Great Lakes, and federal grazing subsidies,
including extermination of predators by USDA Wildlife Services.
Helvarg, Meersman, and Rogers are all longtime ANIMAL
PEOPLE readers and occasional sources, as are several other Writing
Green contributors. Humane concerns were not among the topics of
their award-winning work, but I am aware through direct acquaintance
that most of the Writing Green contributors take humane concerns into
consideration, among many other values and pressures, when they
write about animals. They often do not reach the same conclusions
that animal advocates would. Yet understanding how they evaluate
their material could be quite valuable to animal advocates who are
seriously trying to be more influential to the world beyond the
already persuaded.

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BOOKS: Around the Next Corner

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2006:

Around the Next Corner by Elizabeth Wrenn
New American Library (c/o Penguin, 375 Hudson St.,
New York, NY 10014), 2006. 320 pages, paperback. $12.95.

Deena, a mother of three, married for what seems to be
forever, overweight, insecure and suffering all the emotions
involved with “midlife invisibility,” is locked into a marriage that
has become stale.
With one child away at college, two bored and selfish
teenagers, and a husband so busy at work that she rarely sees him,
Deena feels a void in her life as a wife and mother. Desperately
seeking to add meaning to her life of drudgery, Deena decides to
raise a puppy for K-9 Eyes for the Blind.

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BOOKS: For The Love Of A Dog

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2006:

For The Love Of A Dog
by Patricia B. McConnell, Ph.D.
Ballantine Books, Random House,
1745 Broadway, New York, NY 10019
322 pages, hardcover. $24.95.

McConnell, a zoology teacher at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, wrote The Other End of the Leash, which we
reviewed for Animal People in 2004.
For The Love Of A Dog further draws upon her considerable
experience in dog training and treating canine aggression to offer
insights into the canine mind.
This is not a manual on dog training, although McConnell
presents comparisons of dog and human thought processes which could
make dog training much easier. Nor is it a scientific treatise on
anthropomorphism. McConnell’s goal to make canine behavioral
research more accessible to the public. She explains the biology of
emotions, then focuses on fear, anger, joy and love, teaching the
reader how to identify each of these emotions in dogs from their
expressions, postures, and activity.
A particularly helpful section of photographs at the end of
the book illustrates vividly dogs’ facial expressions as they express
their emotions.
McConnell concludes that, notwithstanding the scientistic tradition
of denying animal consciousness, and of deriding those who argue
that animals have complex mental capacity, dogs do have a rich and
complex emotional life. –Chris Mercer

BOOKS: Timothy; Or Notes Of An Abject Reptile

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2006:

Timothy; Or Notes Of An Abject Reptile
by Verlyn Klinkenborg

Alfred A. Knopf (1745 Broadway
New York, NY 10019), 2006.
178 pages, hardcover. $16.95.

This unusual little book is a philosophical look at the
foibles of the humans from the perspective of a wise and erudite
tortoise. Timothy the Tortoise looks up from his alien English
country garden, and wonders about the human race. Why, he asks
himself, are humans generally so useless? Why can they not do for
themselves naturally the same as all other creatures? To survive
they have to specialize and perform one particular trade to the
exclusion of all else in the universe. Why are they so profoundly
ignorant about the natural world, supposing always that animals are
incapable of reasoning and are merely guided by blind instinct, when
the evidence to the contrary is all around them if they will only
open their eyes and their minds?
Told in terse, truncated sentences, the book is based upon
the life of an actual tortoise who lived in 18th century English
naturalist and curate Gilbert White’s garden. The language used is
authentic 18th century English and the book therefore requires, and
provides, a lengthy glossary in order to aid interpretation.
Intellectually stimulating, the book is as fresh and
different as the whole idea of a myopic, well-intentioned naturalist
being studied by a rational reptile. –Chris Mercer

BOOKS: Capers In The Churchyard

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2006:

Capers In The Churchyard:
Animal Rights Advocacy in the Age of Terror
by Lee Hall
Nectar Bat Press (777 Post Road, Suite 205, Darien, CT 06820), 2006.
162 pages, paperback. $14.95.

Friends of Animals legal director Lee
Hall’s short book attempts to provide a lesson in
strategy for animal rights campaigners. Hall
argues that the goal of animal advocacy should be
to change the aspects of human culture that are
based upon dominating and exploiting non-human
animals.
Violent methods, such as those used by
the Animal Liberation Front and Stop Huntingdon
Animal Cruelty, are in Hall’s view merely the
“greening of hate’” and counter-productive.
Most significantly to Hall, they discredit the
campaigns of those who seek radical reform by
non-violent means. Hall sees the excesses of the
environmental thugs ensnaring all animal
activists in the association with terrorism
amplified by threatened industries and their
stooges in government.

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BOOKS: The Good Good Pig

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2006:

The Good Good Pig by Sy Montgomery
Ballantine Books (c/o Random House, 1745 Broadway MD 18-2, New York,
NY 10019), 2006. Hard cover, 228 pages, $21.95.

The Good Good Pig celebrates 14 years of life with a pig,
and the love of the woman, Sy Montgomery, who saved his life–
“As I walked beside him, I began to rub his belly and grunt
our favorite mantra: “Good, good pig. Big, good pig. Fine,
fine swine. Good. Good, good.” He crumpled to the ground and
rolled over in porcine bliss. And then I lay down beside him,
beneath an apple tree. As long as I lay there and stroked him, he
wouldn’t get up and leave. And that was how I spent that afternoon:
lying beside someone I loved, watching the clouds and the
dragonflies and the sun streaming through the leaves of the apple
tree.”

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BOOKS: Hiss, Whine & Start Over

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2006:

Hiss, Whine & Start Over
by Jane Caryl Mahlow, DVM
Cuppa Press (17181 FM 487, Bartlett, TX 76511), 2006.
222 pages, paperback. $14.95.

A romantic novel is always something good to cuddle up on the
couch with. And this is such a novel, about people and animals too.
Carly works in an animal shelter, three years divorced, with a
broken down house and a lonely broken down life, both of which need
fixing.
When her boss at the animal shelter has to take an extended
leave because his wife is ill, Carly is asked to take over. She is
very uncertain that she is capable of doing the job required of her.
She now must make not just work-related decisions but decisions about
the lives of the animals at the shelter where she has been elevated
to “top dog.”

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BOOKS: Gorilla Dreams: The Legacy of Dian Fossey

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2006:

Two views of–

Gorilla Dreams: The Legacy of Dian Fossey
by Georgianne Nienaber
Universe (2021 Pine Lake Road, Suite 100,
Lincoln, NE 68512), 2006. 255 pages
paperback. $19.95.

Fearless fighter for gorillas

Gorilla Dreams purports to be
posthumously narrated by the late gorilla
researcher Dian Fossey herself. Georgianne
Nienaber writes from what she believes to be
Fossey’s own perspective about how she believed
she was abused, swindled, maligned,
manipulated, used, harassed and obstructed by
cruel and corrupt people, many of them
representatives of respected mainstream
conservation charities.
Asks Nienaber in the Fossey persona,
“How much of my legacy has been used by
fraudulent conservation authorities to collect
funds from those least able to afford them, only
to have those moneys flow into corrupt coffers,
never to reach the gorillas?”

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