Siddle and her husband, David, never expected the farm they bought in Zambia would become the Chimfunshi Wildlife Orphanage, the largest primate sanctuary in the world. It all began the day a game ranger brought Pal, a wounded chimpanzee, to them. Siddle nursed Pal back to health, and as Zambian laws were passed making it illegal for chimpanzees to be privately owned, more chimpanzees followed. Siddle shares the stories of some of the individual chimps: Rita, who arrives with emotional scars but ends up as a mother figure to many of the other chimps; Sandy, whose antics are both irritating and frustrating; and Milla, a much older chimp who is barely familiar with her own kind. Siddle even adopts a baby hippopotamus, Billy, who believes her home is in the Siddles' house! Siddle and her husband face very real problems as well--overcrowding, many chimpanzee escape attempts, and chimp attacks, one of which is near-fatal. Always engrossing, Siddle's memoir gives the reader a real feeling for the complex chimps that populate Chimfunshi.
Kristine HuntleyCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
"A testimony to human bravery and compassion that will lift the spirits of all who read it." --
Roger Fouts, author of Next of Kin, and Deborah Fouts"An exhilaratingeven heroiclife caring for orphaned chimpanzees
on a farm in Africa, by Siddle, the caregiver herself" --
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)"Siddle offers many warm and insightful stories of the chimps' intelligence, courage, and personality." --
Library Journal"Well-paced, in turns poignant and amusing, but above all inspiring." --
Cynthia Moss, author of Elephant Memories: Thirteen Years in the Life of an Elephant Family"[Siddle] writes about the humanity of chimps; their feelings and perceptions, their ability to copes and their inherent limitations." --
Faith McNulty, Providence Journal