Of Lion Paw and Tiger Jaw

Fiction & Literature, Drama, American, Nonfiction, Entertainment, Anthologies
Cover of the book Of Lion Paw and Tiger Jaw by Glenn Vanstrum, Glenn Vanstrum
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Glenn Vanstrum ISBN: 9781466160668
Publisher: Glenn Vanstrum Publication: November 6, 2011
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Glenn Vanstrum
ISBN: 9781466160668
Publisher: Glenn Vanstrum
Publication: November 6, 2011
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

OF LION PAW AND TIGER JAW--Stories

Humans may not be the only animals who crave freedom.

In these stories, we enter the minds of thirteen wild creatures and the humans that interact with them. There is no anthropomorphizing here--the beasts in this collection may be sentient, but they do not think like people, whether we encounter a captive tiger aching to kill a deer or an Alaskan eagle nervous about a pair of photographers approaching its nest. When a gray whale finds itself stranded on a California beach, it has no frame of reference for the dog sniffing its overheated body. Nor can an orangutan in an Indonesian rehab center understand the origins of the flood threatening its cage.

The interior world of non-humans can only be explored through fiction--fiction based on what scientists have learned both in the laboratory and in the field. Only via story can we understand a giraffe struggling through a nasty drought, the sizzling in a white shark’s neural bundles when it finds the sea awash in tuna chum, or the pain an elephant feels from a poacher’s bullet.

People living close to animals best understand how they are different, yet similar to humans. Nature photographers, zookeepers, wildlife biologists, even Central American macaw smugglers, have knowledge of wild creatures urban humans lack. Within this volume we find a scientist exploring the underwater Antarctic world of a leopard seal, a drunk getting a bit too close to a polar bear in Churchill, Manitoba, and a crocodile expert in Northern Australia with a grudge to settle.

In a world where ever-growing human populations steal more and more ecologic carrying capacity from wildlife, it might behoove us to try to understand the animal mind. To understand a creature is to know it; to know it is to love it; and to love it may help keep it alive.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

OF LION PAW AND TIGER JAW--Stories

Humans may not be the only animals who crave freedom.

In these stories, we enter the minds of thirteen wild creatures and the humans that interact with them. There is no anthropomorphizing here--the beasts in this collection may be sentient, but they do not think like people, whether we encounter a captive tiger aching to kill a deer or an Alaskan eagle nervous about a pair of photographers approaching its nest. When a gray whale finds itself stranded on a California beach, it has no frame of reference for the dog sniffing its overheated body. Nor can an orangutan in an Indonesian rehab center understand the origins of the flood threatening its cage.

The interior world of non-humans can only be explored through fiction--fiction based on what scientists have learned both in the laboratory and in the field. Only via story can we understand a giraffe struggling through a nasty drought, the sizzling in a white shark’s neural bundles when it finds the sea awash in tuna chum, or the pain an elephant feels from a poacher’s bullet.

People living close to animals best understand how they are different, yet similar to humans. Nature photographers, zookeepers, wildlife biologists, even Central American macaw smugglers, have knowledge of wild creatures urban humans lack. Within this volume we find a scientist exploring the underwater Antarctic world of a leopard seal, a drunk getting a bit too close to a polar bear in Churchill, Manitoba, and a crocodile expert in Northern Australia with a grudge to settle.

In a world where ever-growing human populations steal more and more ecologic carrying capacity from wildlife, it might behoove us to try to understand the animal mind. To understand a creature is to know it; to know it is to love it; and to love it may help keep it alive.

More books from Anthologies

Cover of the book The Morning Bell Issue #1 by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book PEI Writes 2013 Anthology by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Walter Scott: The Best Works by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Deadlines: A Tribute to William E. Wallace by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Harlequin Historical November 2016 - Box Set 1 of 2 by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Unifying Elements and Structural Patterns in Joseph Heller´s Catch 22 by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Lueurs by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book The Farmer's Helper 1 and 2 by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book A Literary Feast: Recipes Inspired by Novels, Poems and Plays by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Le dur désir de durer by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Jodi Picoult's Leaving Time Summary by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Callie & Terri by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Christopher Morley’s Collected Works: (11 Works ) by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Le vite de' più eccellenti architetti, pittori, et scultori italiani (Indice attivo) by Glenn Vanstrum
Cover of the book Stories on the Four Winds by Glenn Vanstrum
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy