Andrew Westoll is an award-winning narrative journalist and the author of The Riverbones, a travel memoir set in the jungles of Suriname. Before becoming a writer, Andrew trained as a primatologist in the South American rainforest, where he studied wild troops of capuchin monkeys. He now lives in Toronto.
The Chimps of Fauna Sanctuary: A True Story of Resilience and Recovery
Paperback
(First Edition)
- ISBN-13: 9780547737386
- Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
- Publication date: 05/01/2012
- Edition description: First Edition
- Pages: 290
- Sales rank: 142,011
- Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 7.90(h) x 0.80(d)
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In 1997 Gloria Grow started a sanctuary for chimps retired from biomedical research on her farm outside Montreal. For the indomitable Gloria, caring for thirteen great apes is like presiding over a maximum security prison, a Zen sanctuary, an old folks’ home, and a New York deli during the lunchtime rush all rolled into one. But she is first and foremost creating a refuge for her troubled charges, a place where they can recover and begin to trust humans again.
Hoping to win some of this trust, the journalist Andrew Westoll spent months at Fauna Farm as a volunteer and vividly recounts his time in the chimp house and the histories of its residents. He arrives with dreams of striking up an immediate friendship with the legendary Tom, the wise face of the Great Ape Protection Act, but Tom seems all too content to ignore him. Gradually, though, old man Tommie and the rest of the “troop” begin to warm toward Westoll as he learns the routines of life at the farm and realizes just how far the chimps have come. Seemingly simple things like grooming, establishing friendships and alliances, and playing games with the garden hose are all poignant testament to the capacity of these animals to heal.
Brimming with empathy and winning stories of Gloria and her charges, The Chimps of Fauna Sanctuary is an absorbing, bighearted book that grapples with questions of just what we owe to the animals who are our nearest genetic relations.
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“The Chimps of Fauna Sanctuary is a true story of endurance and resilience, compassion, dedication and love. I knew the prison-like conditions of the medical research facility from which Gloria Grow rescued these chimpanzees; when I visited them at their new sanctuary I was moved to tears. Finally they had reached a secure haven where, gradually, they could recover from their years of torment. Andrew Westoll is a born story teller: The Chimps of Fauna Sanctuary, written with empathy and skill, tenderness and humour, involves us in a world few understand. And leaves us marvelling at the ways in which chimpanzees are so like us, deserve our help, and are entitled to our respect.”
—Jane Goodall Ph.D., DBE , Founder – the Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace
“This book will make you think deeply about our relationship with great apes. It amazed me to discover the behaviors and feelings of the chimpanzees.”
—Temple Grandin, author of Animals in Translation
“This book is a wonder. Passionate, intelligent, moving and, above all, tremendously important, it illustrates the triumph of the wild spirit and offers surprising hope that the human animal might yet be redeemed. Think of Peter Singer's Animal Liberation and J.M. Coetzee’s The Lives of Animals, and you’ll have some idea of what it is you hold in your hands. It has been a long time since any author has inspired me to such extremes of compassion and humility.”
—Barbara Gowdy, author of The White Bone
The story of primate research in the United States, told through the lens of a retirement home for traumatized chimpanzees.
Primatologist turned writer Westoll (The Riverbones: Stumbling After Eden in the Jungles of Suriname, 2008) spent several weeks as a volunteer at Fauna Sanctuary, in the French Canadian countryside, where since the late 1990s the devoted Gloria Grow has cared for chimps who suffer from psychological disturbances after having spent much of their lives in painful biomedical research. Living in a basement apartment, he helped out by washing dishes, scraping feces and preparing medicine-laced afternoon smoothies. This incisive book describes the daily lives of 13 resident chimps, their resilience after so much suffering and the invasive research practices that "render them as psychologically compromised as human victims of domestic violence or political and war prisoners." Chimps have been used in invasive research since the end of the 17th century, writes the author. In the United States, the intelligent, human-like creatures have been involved in lab experiments on diseases from polio to AIDS, and served as living crash-test dummies in high-speed and high-altitude travel studies. The U.S. is the only developed nation that continues using primates in such experiments, with about 1,000 chimps now locked up in research facilities. Westoll urges readers to support the Great Ape Protection Act (now in committee in Congress), which is designed to end the use of chimps in research and has bipartisan support. The author will donate a portion of his royalties to the Fauna Lifetime Care Fund.
An affecting work about our genetic cousin.