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Paperback Elephantoms: Tracking the Elephant Book

ISBN: 0393324591

ISBN13: 9780393324594

Elephantoms: Tracking the Elephant

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Book Overview

As a child in South Africa, spending summers exploring the wild with his boyhood friends, Lyall Watson came face to face with his first elephant. This entertaining and enchanting work (Washington Post Book World) chronicles how Watson's fascination grew into a lifelong quest to understand the nature and behavior of this impressive creature.

From that moment on, Watson's fascination grew into a lifelong obsession with understanding the nature...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Majickal!

I was only recently introduced to Lyall Watson's writings. Having first read Gifts of Unknown Things, I knew I'd found a writer of "lyrical fact," a talented man who perceives things from a multitude of viewpoints, blending them together with wisdom and a superb talent for linking very disparate things. I promise you that you will never again see elephants without being absorbed by your new knowledge of their gifts.

Mix of mystical and factual thoughts on elephants

Marvelously written with elements of mystery and science. This is well worth reading, along with To the Elephant Graveyard, which is somewhat similar.

The mysterious elephant

I enjoyed this book. The author discusses his encounters with elephants over the course of his life in South Africa. Lurking beneath the surface is the possibility that the elephant's existence may go beyond the physical level. Elephants appear where they have not been seen for years. Lyall Watson encounters men whose life seems strangely connected on the spiritual level with the elephant.At times I was not sure whether Watson was sticking to non-fiction or whether maybe he was twisting the facts a little to make a better story. Perhaps, as is often the case, truth is stranger than fiction. Nevertheless, the case is made that elephants are sensitive, social, and mysterious beings who deserve a place to thrive on Earth.

A SCIENTIFIC AND LITERARY ACHIEVEMENT

ELEPHANTOMS is biologist Lyall Watson's homage to one of the most significant influences in his life: the African elephant. The book is an inspiring compilation of elephant lore and scientific insights, served up in vintage Watson style. One of the most attractive qualities of Watson's work is his willingness to honor the world's great mysteries, such as the nature of consciousness and its role in the world. What is real and what is illusion? Does the mind participate in generating what we call facts? In his elephant encounters, this question recurs again and again. Watson faces these mysteries as few scientists are willing to do. The result is an enchanting display of erudition and intition, which recall's Aristotle's observation that wonder is the beginning of wisdom. Watson vividly describes the appalling stupidity and cruelty we humans have displayed toward one of the planet's most majestic creatures. Thus ELEPHANTOMS evokes in the reader a range of emotions, from ecstasy to rage. ELEPHANTOMS meets my requirements as a reader. It educates, inspires, and challenges. It is anchored in science and spirit, head and heart. Thank you, Lyall Watson.-- Larry Dossey, MDAuthor: HEALING WORDS, REINVENTING MEDICINE, and HEALING BEYOND THE BODY

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Lyall Watson's newest book, "Elephantoms, Tracking the Elephant," begins with a scenario slightly reminiscent of the novel, "Lord of the Flies." A troupe of bright, but rebellious, ten through thirteen-year-old boys has a month's unsupervised living at the southern edge of the African continent. (In an emergency, a distant farmhouse phone could be used to summon help.) These are brief, entirely amiable excursions unlike, and predating by several years, Golding's mini-society with its conjectures on the inherency of human evil. In the case of Watson's group - the self-dubbed "Strandlopers" - it was a situation affording them room to cultivate independence, camaraderie and a host of other survival skills.Whether this is where Watson's own lifelong interest in the natural world began or expanded, is moot. It included his first sighting of a wild elephant and left an indelible mark. For those who have never read any of this author's twenty-odd books, Lyall Watson holds degrees in a number of scientific disciplines alongside a pair of doctorates in anthropology and ethology. He has traveled extensively, both as an individual and an expedition leader. Earlier books include "Secret Life of Inanimate Objects," "Dreams of Dragons," "Heaven's Breath," the best-selling "Supernature" and, most recently, "Jacobson's Organ".The young Watson's search for remaining elephants parallels his search for a university study focus, one that would include more than the single species represented by medicine. Human influences are colorful and impressive, as science notables Raymond Dart, Alistar Hardy, and Desmond Morris wander the halls of the author's curriculum. After an internship at the renowned London Zoo, Watson returns to his birthplace to direct the Johannesburg Zoo. Here he meets another elephant and the next phase of his search.The history of African decision-making in terms of its unique animal populations appears to have been little better than that of the rest of the world. While South Africa's Addo Elephant Park is home to a 300-member herd and has achieved international fame, it is a feeble - possibly futile - gesture alongside Watson's listing of the nineteenth century indiscriminate slaughter of hundreds of thousands of elephants in what is now Zambia. "... a further 585,000 were wiped out in the Congo in the next half century." Lest we think the twentieth century brought more enlightened times, there is Watson's account of his beloved South Africa's government-sanctioned elephant executions. (Our own Teddy Roosevelt, indulging himself in a 1909 post-presidential bloodbath/safari, helped dispatch eleven elephants - along with 500 other animals.) For all the sorrow attendant to this and other stories of human interaction with "lesser" species, the author manages to end on a hopeful note. Given what we have learned in the preceding pages, one feels it is a hard-won optimism.The combination here is of naturalist survey and subtle biography. What better wa
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