Elephants
Hannah Mumby
Jonathan Ball
Review: Lauren O’Connor-May
This book is a blend of autobiographical ramblings, travel commentary and science.
It is poetically written and has thought-provoking and funny moments.
Despite this, I did not enjoy the book as much as I was hoping to. I like elephants and in choosing this book, I was expecting there to be only “elephantsy” science in the book but I felt there was too much of the author – her musings, her experiences, her feelings – that watered down the science and made the book less enjoyable for me.
This blend of genres is what makes pop science so … well, popular, and while I’ve enjoyed other pop science books before, this one just didn’t do it for me.
At times, I would just start to really enjoy the science bits when the author would suddenly go off at a different tangent and lose me. As a result, the somewhat slim book took me forever to read, which my husband noted and commented on.
“Is that book that boring?” he asked.
I replied: “It’s somehow both interesting and boring at the same time.”
But, I do think the book will find an audience. The science in the book is offbeat, touching on subjects that I had not yet found in other books or documentaries, such as elephant menstrual cycles, elephant self-awareness and a whole lot about dung.
I was particularly tickled when
Mumby described a male elephant as if she was introducing a hero in a romance novel.
Later, she lovingly talked about the dung sample he left behind, almost as if it was a gift just for her.
We received 91 entries in our competition for the David Baldacci book hamper and the lucky winner was Vuyo Sangweni of Philippi.
Staircase repairs coming to Ocean View council flats