Scan barcode
chickpeameatball's review against another edition
3.0
More of a 3 1/2 stars. This novel started out really promising, but quickly lost me after the first few chapters. I enjoyed reading the authors personal experiences with her hobby farm, but lost interest as she shared outdated articles that often became disheartening.
linneamo's review against another edition
4.0
as far as animal Nonfiction essays go, I liked this better than "Fuzz"
alt_k's review against another edition
3.0
I love how Susan Orlean really dives into a topic that some may find boring and makes it absolutely fascinating. The Orchid Thief is one of my favorite books. I did really think On Animals was well written and interesting. However, I think a more fitting title for the book would be On Exploiting Animals. In this book, animals are almost exclusively talked about in reference to their relationship with humans, which is mostly exploitative and sometimes violent. It made me sad. Perhaps the biggest problem is that the author seldom seems aware of this. I understand the book wasn't meant to be an exposé on animal abuse, but the nonchalant tone of the audiobook (read by the author) seemed in stark contrast to the content.
librarypusa's review against another edition
4.0
I trust in the fact that animals are pure in their hearts, efficient in their emotions. I admire that they don't seem to waste time hating each other if there isn't a specific purpose to it. Food, shelter, dominance, and love affairs seem to be the things that matter, and once those are sorted out, what else is there to say?
There is a lot of excellent writing ability on display here. While I expected the whole book to be what the last essay, Farmville, was like, I still quite enjoyed the book for what it was. Orlean's ability to hold your attention via directive pacing kept me there long enough to get emotionally invested, and her research made me stay till the end. Orlean's jumping off point is animals, but it's also a lot of history, microeconomics, a bit of politics, and a look into a hyper specific military program.
My favorite essays in this book are Where's Willy? and The Rabbit Outbreak.
Where's Willy is a biography of the orca that starred in the 1993 smash hit movie Free Willy. I've never watched that movie, only being vaguely aware of its existence via pop culture references. Orlean tells us in plain terms the sequence of events that happened to the orca, but adds real tear-jerking heart.
The orca, named Keiko, was gentle and intelligent. He was easy to love, and love him people did. This article would be a total downer if we were only told about the bleak conditions for captive orcas. Humor comes in via absurd scenes of Keiko-love that gripped every person that came across him. Absurdity persists as the human beings surrounding Keiko, from guests to tank owners to scientists to billionaires, coming from as far as Mexico and all the way up Iceland, desperately grasp but fail to determine how exactly do you love an orca in a way that is good for him?
The Rabbit Outbreak does not bank on sentiment. Strangely enough, it had thrill. It is about the circumstances that surround rabbit-human relations. The contradiction of rabbits as livestock/pet come to a head as the RHDV2 epidemic hits the USA. There is sociological dimension to containing a virus, which gave the article a morbid scope. Government agencies, matters of jurisdiction, meat industries, ecological questions, manufacturing logistics, shades of morality.
The narrative is propelled forward by the urgency of a spreading disease with an ~80% mortality rate and a virus that survives for weeks without a host. This essay is reminiscent of the 2011 movie Contagion, complete with the proliferation of social media-based fear-mongering (yes, they both have that!)
There were a few things about this book I didn't like, but it was more in the realm of our opposing views on certain topics. I am fine with most of those diverging opinions, some I consider flaws. These deductive flaws would be 1) considering hotels and condominiums as infrastructure hallmarks of "development" and
Spoiler
2) the implicit messaging of calling the USSR in 1980s Afghanistan as a "Soviet invasion" (which is correct) but calling the US forces occupying 2000s Afghanistan as "Operation Enduring Freedom." (Not a lot of freedom in the torture of detainees)Overall, this book was great, a body of work from a career in journalism spanning 16 years. One couldn't ask for more when there's a crazy amount of knowledge collected from flying out to countries, attending several animal shows, conducting interviews and observations. But on top of all that, there's a great deal of polish in the writing, which made learning about all this random stuff enjoyable.
andremthefoozle's review
informative
relaxing
slow-paced
3.25
An interesting series of essays about various animals and how humans intersect and impact their existence and lives. As with any collection of essays, some are more interesting or resonant than others.
I think I preferred Orleans's The Library Book; that book's habing a specific throughline helped motivate me to keep listening while the disconnected pieces here were nice but enabled me to step away from and forget about this book for some longer stretches.
I will never not enjoy getting to hear the odd names people come up with for their pets, especially here, chickens.
I think I preferred Orleans's The Library Book; that book's habing a specific throughline helped motivate me to keep listening while the disconnected pieces here were nice but enabled me to step away from and forget about this book for some longer stretches.
I will never not enjoy getting to hear the odd names people come up with for their pets, especially here, chickens.
francosteen's review against another edition
funny
informative
lighthearted
reflective
relaxing
medium-paced
5.0
One of my favorite things: finding a book that you knew nothing about, or just saw in literally passing it by and just decide on a whim to read it, and THEN absolutely loving it.
I love reading about animals, and this is one of my fave kinds: informative, personal, fun, and reflecting on the human-animal relationships we’ve built.
This is also my first Orlean read finally, so going to go back and read more!
I love reading about animals, and this is one of my fave kinds: informative, personal, fun, and reflecting on the human-animal relationships we’ve built.
This is also my first Orlean read finally, so going to go back and read more!