Photo de l'auteur

Roy Aronson

Auteur de Tales of an African Vet

3 oeuvres 59 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Dr. Roy Aronson has been a veterinarian in South Africa for more than twenty-five years. The author of It's a Vet's Life: Adventures in the City and the Wild, he is the South Africa Veterinary Association representative to the Commonwealth Veterinary Association.

Œuvres de Roy Aronson

Tales of an African Vet (2007) 56 exemplaires
Jamie James (2011) 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Nationalité
South Africa
Pays (pour la carte)
South Africa
Lieux de résidence
Cape Town, South Africa
Professions
Veterinarian, writer

Membres

Critiques

You will hear this a lot in my review, and that is done on purpose: this book was like an advertisement for the hopes of a documentary being worked on by the author. Otherwise I found the book interesting.

Of course, when you write a book like this you are going to pick your most exciting experiences and tell them in a way that emphasizes the story and highlights the adventure. I can't help wondering how much of that was going on here in order to sell the hope of the documentary, but then again what reader wants to read about you putting a little antibiotic cream on a docile animal and sending it on its happy way. Well, maybe I would have liked a little of that balance, but I didn't miss the simple stories like that either, there were plenty of good tales in this book that kept me turning the pages. You expect dramatic vet visits in Africa and this book delivers that almost too perfectly.

It was a great little travel read and I did think it was a good educator without sounding too preachy... Except for the documentary mentions, which seemed about as frequent as I have put them in here. I wasn't sold on that scheme much.
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Signalé
mirrani | Jun 24, 2017 |
Adult Reader Reaction: Fascinating. Dr. Aronson's descriptions were so vivid that I often felt I was standing beside or behind him. It isn't every day that we learn how to treat lion and tigers, cobra, and crocodiles (among others). I tried to read the book cover to cover, but this really is more of an anthology. Pick stories that sound interesting. As I got about halfway through the book, the stories struck a repetitive pattern and I lost interest in continuing.

Pros: Readers who love animals and see themselves in field work will thoroughly enjoy Dr. Aronson's biography.

There's more to our review. Visit the The Reading Tub® to see why we recommend this book. You can add your review, too.
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Signalé
TheReadingTub | 3 autres critiques | Nov 6, 2015 |
Tales of an African Vet is a fascinating series of vignettes from the life of author Roy Aronson. The stories follow his real life experiences as a veterinarian in South Africa and his patients range from elephants and lions in the wild to snakes and squirrel monkeys brought into a clinic for treatment.

Dr. Aronson shows a depth of passion for his work and for all the animals he treats that reveals a sense of compassion as great as his intelligence. The book is amazing for it's details of science and medicine - and the logistics behind treating incredibly large and dangerous wild animals - as well as the knowledge and interesting facts about the variety of animals encountered (from rhinos to alligators to hedgehogs to koi).

The book was well written and the format of stories rather than a single narrative provides a sweeping coverage of the grand scale of Dr. Aronson's work. This is a great book for anyone interested in African animals, exotic veterinary medicine, or just a great biography of a man with an extraordinary job.
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½
1 voter
Signalé
elbakerone | 3 autres critiques | Sep 20, 2011 |
In Tales of an African Vet the author shares various stories of memorable experiences he's had working with wild animals. Most aren't animals held in zoos, but ones roaming free out in the bush. So in order to treat the animals he often had to spend hours searching for them, successfully get them darted so they could be safely handled while asleep, and then monitor them until they woke up again (so they wouldn't get attacked by another predator). Quite an undertaking. Not all the stories are of creatures roaming wild and free. There are also various animals brought into his vet practice: a pet squirrel monkey, a snake injured by a dog, a hedgehog likewise suffering from a dog bite. He also tells of visiting a crocodile farm, and a fish farm with valued koi suffering from the bends! The stories are all good reads, engaging and very intriguing, especially when they get into issues of animal conservation. Some of them are sobering- it was dismaying to read about how close cheetahs are coming to extinction for example, and (inevitably) there are a few cases where the animals don't survive treatment. But a lot of them have good outcomes, and positive outlook for the future (he says that wild areas in South African are actually increasing as more and more people who own land privately turn it into game parks or reserves with habitat suitable for wild animals). It's easy to tell which animals are the author's favorites; he gives a lot more description about the elephants and crocodiles than the lions, for example. I enjoyed reading about them all.

from the Dogear Diary
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1 voter
Signalé
jeane | 3 autres critiques | Apr 4, 2011 |

Prix et récompenses

Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Membres
59
Popularité
#280,813
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
5
ISBN
8

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