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ExUrbanis

Urban Leaving to Country Living

WE BOUGHT A ZOO by Benjamin Mee: Book Review

September13

I haven’t seen the movie version of this book but just read a brief review of it by Barbara on Views From the Countryside. But I did read the book before I started my blog, and thought you might be interested in the review I posted on LibraryThing at that time.

3.5 star ratingWe Bought a Zoo, Banjamin MeeWe Bought a Zoo is subtitled: The Amazing True Story of a Young Family, a Broken Down Zoo, and the 200 Wild Animals That Changed Their Lives Forever

Given that, the story takes a little time to get off the ground. We find the author, a free-lance writer, living in rural southern France with his wife & two children and refinishing two dirt-floor stone barns. When word comes through his sister that a dilapidated zoo in the English countryside is for sale, the author & his extended family take action to purchase it. This is not an easy endeavour and the business details fill the first quarter of the book. Note also that a BBC film crew got wind of the endeavour and asked to film the process.

The thing is, I don’t think I’d like Benjamin Mee if I met him in person. He uprooted his family once, by selling their beloved flat in London to move to his personal idyll in France, and then again, back to England because, after all, HE’D always wanted to own a zoo and now his French dream wasn’t what he wanted after all. On both occasions, he overrode his wife Katherine. This was especially appalling to me the second time because Katherine was newly diagnosed with a brain tumour & receiving (excellent) treatment in France. The fact that his (possibly) dying wife wasn’t enthused about this new venture didn’t faze him a bit.Benjamin Mee

In addition, although Mee has experienced staff and certified professionals advising him, he ignores their advice in serious decisions at least twice that he reports. In both cases, things ended up favorably but, rather than be grateful for twists of fate that may have affected the situations, he boasts and struts.

But the story? Animal lovers, once you get past the purchase transaction, there’s plenty of goodies for you amidst the details of the continuing financial issues, grim living conditions (for the family), and Katherine’s disease and eventual death.

Imagine the day staff moved Tammy the tiger without proper restraint precaution, only to have the beast gain consciousness as they moved her. Mee describes the situation as being “beyond fear, to total calm”. But the fear lingered when, sometime later, Mee & his brother are startled by a large animal moving behind them while checking some reservoir pipes, & spring to defend their lives – against the neighbor’s cow. I believe they were less afraid when one of their younger wolves was running loose through the nearest town. And there is an amusing exposé: what happens “When Porcupines Go Bad”.

Perhaps the most likable animal in the zoo was Zak, the elderly alpha wolf, who “maintained his grip on the pack now, not with brute force, but through sheer charisma and experience.” The account of his surgery to save him from testicular cancer will be a source of angst among male readers and of glee to the women.

Zak

I would have loved to have seen more photographs of the animals Mee brings to life in his stories, but the colour pictures included are disappointing. Nearly half are of their project in France, and the ones of the animals include many that are not named in the book, and exclude many that are.

I really did learn a tremendous amount, though, about the running of a zoo. It’s a highly regulated & examined business – and an almost unimaginably expensive one to run. The money and the struggle to get it, manage it & plan for making it, are a major part of the book.

And, animal lovers with the same dream, please note that, despite the months of Herculean effort by Mee, his family & his staff, the zoo would not have succeeded financially if the BBC (whose film crew had been on location for those many months) had not run the four-part television series Titles “Ben’s Zoo” in November of their opening year. That brought more paying visitors and made endless opportunities for additional moneymaking venues such as this book (and ensuing movie rights). Without that, the zoo would have closed, broke, after the first summer and the animals would have been dispersed. In other words, “Kids, don’t try this at home!

Should you read it? Even though I personally dislike the author, he does write well and the book held my attention from beginning to end. There are no bogged down bits – it’s all moving forward. If you like animals or are interested in learning about the world of zoos, then by all means – read it & enjoy! 3.5 stars

For Canadian readers:
We Bought a Zoo


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Books Read in June 2012

September6

I know, I know – I’m behind! It was a busy summer, and the longer I was away from blogging, the harder it was to break the silence. But please bear with me because my blog (besides being for your reading pleasure) is also my personal ‘books read’ record so I must post these.

I didn’t finish one book on my Kindle in June – I think I needed a break from it after my two week trip in May on which I read nothing but my Kindle. A couple of really good non-fiction titles topped my list in June, and I read some mystery titles to try to catch up on some reading challenges.

The Story of Stuff, Annie LeonardThe Story of Stuff by Annie Leonard 5 star rating

Subtitled The Impact of Overconsumption on the Planet, Our Communities, and Our Health-And How We Can Make It Better, this is an expansion on the 20 minute Internet movie of the same name. The book digs into the five facets of the linear economic system in use in North America. It’s amazing, it’s controversial and it’s has been haunting me all summer. I will be posting a full review of this. Watch the movie while you wait for it! 5 stars

4 star ratingUContent: The Information Professional’s Guide to User-Generated Content by Nicholas G. Tomaiuolo
An invaluable handbook for Information Professionals aka librarians. A goldmine of information for the rest of us. See my review. 4 stars

A Dog's Journey, W. Bruce Cameron4 star ratingA Dog’s Journey by W. Bruce Cameron

This is a follow-up to A Dog’s Purpose which I read last year and loved so much. I highly anticipated the sequel but found it a little flat – I just couldn’t invest in C.J., or in the dog being a Chihuahua for a great deal of the book. I’m still glad I read it, though, and if you’re a dog lover, you’ll be glad you read it too. 4 stars

3.5 star ratingManners for Women by Mrs. Humphrey
A reprint of the 1897 publication of the same name. Here are my thoughts on it. 3.5 stars

3.5 star ratingLonesome Hero by Fred Stenson (Canadian author)
I’m sure I would have loved this when it was first published in 1973: my head was ‘there’ and the world was ‘there’, man. But the ‘there’ didn’t resonate with me now and just wanted to slap the young hero who is dragged to Europe (which turns out to be no further than England) and then dumped there by his girlfriend. For capturing a slice of 1970. 3.5 stars

3.5 star ratingMurder: A Crafty Business by Lila Philips (Nova Scotian author)
I love mysteries and Lila Philips is an author from Truro NS (the closest town to our village in Rural Nova Scotia). That I would read her book was a given. It’s a pretty standard cozy: the new owner of the town craft shop finds a body in the basement and has a vested interest in proving the police wrong. It was well-written and edited with decent plot but, ultimately, forgettable. 3.5 stars

3.5 star ratingMurder at Hazelmoor aka The Sittaford Mystery by Agatha Christie
One of Christie’s stand-alone novels, it’s another standard cozy – a locked room mystery with a pretty obvious perpetrator. Although it wasn’t Christie’s best, I always enjoy the settings and her sleight-of-hand, even after I’m onto her. 3.5 stars

2.5 star ratingThe Crime at Black Dudley by Margery Allingham
The Crime at Black Dudley, Margery Allingham, Albert Campion #1This is the first in Allingham’s long-running Albert Campion series, although in this book Campion has only a bit part, I wasn’t impressed by the mystery, and was distracted by all the implausible secret rooms and passageways. In addition, I thought the writing was ‘loose’. Since this was Allingham’s first published effort, I’ll make allowances and I won’t say that I’ll never read another of hers. I’m just not in a hurry to do so. 2.5 stars

2 star ratingOne Lonely Night by Mickey Spillane
Oh, I wanted to like Mickey Spillane! Maybe it’s just his protagonist Mike Hammer who has skewed attitudes towards violence to women; maybe I’m just not a noir mystery fan after all. 2 stars


For Canadian readers:
The Story of Stuff
UContent
A Dog’s Journey
Manners for Women
Lonesome Hero
Murder: A Crafty Business
The Murder At Hazelmoor
The Crime at Black Dudley
One Lonely Night

Kindle editions:
The Story of Stuff
UContent
A Dog’s Journey
Lonesome Hero
One Lonely Night


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MANNERS FOR WOMEN (1897) by Mrs. Humphrey – Book Review

September6

Manners for Women, Mrs. Humphrey

Manners for Women is said to be a 1993 reprint of the book of the same name published in 1897. At first, I wasn’t convinced that it wasn’t a parody of such a book, but Internet sources (at least) tell me otherwise. The word out there seems to be that this is the genuine article, although I’m still not entirely convinced.

What made me think it’s a satire of a manners book? Besides my naturally suspicious nature? Such ‘modern’ comments as:

(I)t would be a good day when a League for the Mitigation of Outlay on Marriages should be started …

Doubts aside, Manners for Women was enjoyable to hold and read: it measures 4″x7″ (10cmx20cm), is soft-covered & light, and printed on an ivory matte paper. The advice is interesting: said to be aimed at the middle or merchant class – those who did not have these manners ‘bred’ into them as the gentry did, but who wished to be able to hobnob with them. But the language has a modern feel to it, certainly not as ‘wordy’ as a newspaper or a magazine of the era, and seems many times to accommodate today’s sensibilities:

At this end of the century one is first a woman, then a possible wife. There is one’s own life to be lived, apart from the partnership that may be entered into by and by. The idea used to be that it was a wife’s duty to sink her individuality completely, and live only for her husband.

Really, were attitudes this enlightened then? If so, the author writes with wit and candor, and with foresight beyond her times.

postmanGenuine or a clever counterfeit, Manners for Women certainly shows that some things change:

In the country house there are usually but two, or at most three, postal deliveries daily, and the “rat-tat” [of the postman’s knock to pick up mail] is seldom, if ever, heard.

while others stay the same:

Nowadays (…) we live at such high pressure that it is only from friends living abroad that we ever expect a real letter.

Plus ce change plus c’est le meme chose

I’m looking forward to reading the author’s companion book “Manners for Men”.


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