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West With Giraffes
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Amy
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Apr 01, 2023 08:21AM

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When is everyone planning on starting?


Sounds good.


I love both coming of age, books about journeys/quests and animals of any kind. West with Giraffes combines all three, so I'm bound to like it.
It is reminiscent of both Water for Elephants and Lincoln Highway, because of the time period among other things.

Of course they are going in the opposite direction, but there are certainly some similarities between the main protagonists.

It has managed to get me interested in giraffes and when I did a quick search there was a dearth of books about giraffes unless you were reading children's books and there are an abundance of picture books.
One interesting book I did find was Pursuing Giraffe: A 1950s Adventure by Anne Innis Dagg. Anne Innis Dagg was a young Canadian zoologist who in the 1950s went to Africa to do field studies on giraffes. This is her memoir about it.
She is still alive today and has a foundation:
https://anneinnisdaggfoundation.org/h...
Giraffes, a keystone animal are currently undergoing what is called a silent extinction, which you can read about here:
https://taronga.org.au/news/2019-06-2...
While adults are interested in polar bear, lions, elephants and rhinoceros, most sites seem to present giraffes for a younger audience. Here are a few:
https://www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.or...
https://www.ifaw.org/animals/giraffes
https://www.oregonzoo.org/discover/an...

One of the things which I had trouble with was picturing the truck. I was imagining it as a semi of sorts. However this was not the case.
It is not much of a spoiler to see what it actually looked like:
https://coronadotimes.com/news/2022/0...
https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/Reco...

I remember taking my grandkids to the zoo several years ago to see giraffes and they had a chance to feed them. I remember they had very sandpapery tongues. You can't look at a giraffe and not smile!

I have a patient who is an animal communicator. I really like it when books highlight the incredibly special relationships with and between animals that develop. That part felt true and like truth revealed to me. I did feel editing wise, that it was fine to tell it from the point of view of an 105 year old man. But the scenes around his furious writing and nursing home behavior did not add to the story and in fact was a distraction. It could have been just as beautiful without those slips inserted. But I like when a book is different - and spiritual. This one was both.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Lincoln Highway (other topics)Pursuing Giraffe: A 1950s Adventure (other topics)