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Loading... Jennieby Douglas Preston
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A novel, Douglas Preston's first, I think, although it is presented very believably as a true story put together by the author from notes, research and interviews. Jennie was a chimpanzee who was rescued as a baby by Professor Hugo Archibald when her mother died giving birth to her. Professor Archibald brought her back to his family in Boston, where she was raised as one of the family, believing herself to be human. This presented an irresistible opportunity for Archibald's colleagues to study Jennie's ability to communicate using American Sign Language (ASL). The Professor's family also learned it, and Jennie studied daily with a researcher from the institute. Jennie assimilated into her human family, going through many of the milestones an American child would go through: riding her tricycle, playing with her pet kitten and her brother Sandy, and rebelling against her "parents" as she entered puberty. She attained some measure of stardom as the rest of the world became aware of her and her impressive communication skills. This is a funny, touching, and ultimately heart-wrenching story that reads like a true event. The author has done extensive research into experiments in teaching chimpanzees ASL, and occasions where chimps have been raised with human families, and says there is nothing in this novel that could not have easily happened in real life. I tend to believe him. This is a fictional story about a wild baby chimpanzee adopted by the family of an anthropologist and raised like a human child until the chimp is an adult. Because of the time period that the story covers, it seems that the story might be inspired by the chimpanzee, Washoe, one of the first chimpanzees taught sign language. However, it's clear that the characters and events in the story are largely fictional. A physical anthropologist is collecting animal skeletons in Africa, when by chance, a dying mother chimpanzee brought to his camp gives birth. He decides to keep the baby, and takes it home to America. He seems to have no clear plans about how the baby chimp, named Jennie, will adapt to life in a human society, or how his family will accommodate a chimpanzee as a pet. In the US, his 7 year old son, immediately forms a strong bond with the animal, and even treats Jennie like a sibling. However, the Anthropologist's daughter, the same age as Jennie, never becomes as close to the chimp. When it is discovered that Jennie can learn sign language, the family also learns to sign, and they are then able to communicate to some degree with Jennie. The story is told from the view point of a fictional journalist about 25 years after Jennie was brought to America. It is written as a series of interviews with family members or friends who knew Jennie, and also includes excerpts of the fictional autobiography of the Anthropologist who by then had passed away. In the Afterword, the real author states that while the story is fiction, Jennie's character is scientifically accurate. At 293 pages, the book seemed longer than necessary, in my opinion. no reviews | add a review
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Jennie is the story of an orphaned chimpanzee who grows up with her adopted human family. Jennie adapts to her surroundings quickly, to enjoy the pursuits of the average young person - riding her own tricycle, playing with her pet kitten and Barbie, and fighting with her siblings. Written as a fictional oral history, Jennie tells the story of the Archibalds, the Boston-area family that took in the chimp from 1965 to 1975, and the ensuing family and scientific debates.Jennie's story is hilarious, poignant, and, in times, desperately sad. Based on accounts of six different cases of chimps in human surroundings, Jennie will make you laugh, fill you with wonder, and make your heart go out to a touching and warm character unlike any other - Jennie. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.52Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1900-1944LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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(Personally, though I fully support efforts to protect the apes and their habitat, and convict of manslaughter those who poach or conduct torturous research on them, I think the apes aren't as smart as humans, because they're not protecting themselves. But that's beside the point of this wise and moving book.) ( )