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Yep, that's right. It's time for the Fully Vetted annual animal book
roundup! Every year I try to offer you the best of the animal book
genre, past and present. Though I happen to take extreme liberties with
the topic (sourcing books that may merely remind me of animal issues,
for example), it's usually a popular post.
And, as always, your comments offer gobs of new material to gift, or to
gorge on, over the coming year.
Without further ado, here's this year's top ten (in no particular order,
I assure you):
1. Fire by Kristen
Cashore
Though
it doesn't get highest marks for the brilliance of its prose, this young
adult book offers a captivating story set in an otherworldly, Earth-like
place. It dwells on monstrous humans and animals and, through their
plight, offers us an interesting meditation on personal choices when it
comes to unwanted genetic traits.
2. Eating Animals
by Jonathan Safran Foer
This
one's a clear winner, from a masterly prose-about-animals standpoint.
Too bad I ultimately don't buy his arguments in favor of vegetarianism.
Still, I found it to be a great read, and I feel that anyone interested
in vegetarianism/veganism and the politics of food should devour it.
(Couldn't help it.)
3. Animals Make Us
Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals by Temple
Grandin
Following
up on her books, Making Animals Happy, Animals in Translation and Humane
Livestock Handling, Grandin works her inimitable magic yet again with
another discussion of what our animals need — though this time it's more
to do with their emotional needs than their physical requirements.
Unmissable.
4. Art and Max
by David Wiesner
I
had to love this book. Not only is Max my son's middle name (and
nickname), this story of a friendship between two lizards is also about
why art (also one of the lizard's names, as the title indicates) is so
deeply important. This is an irresistible kid's book for the early
reader.
5. The Tiger: A True
Story of Vengeance and Survival by John Vaillant
A
fully vetted true story that tells of a remote Russian Amur tiger who
planned his revenge on a prey-thieving poacher; more evidence in favor
of complex animal emotion and capacity for reason. Do you like travel
fiction, too? This one's a double whammy.
6. Ubiquitous:
Celebrating Nature's Survivors by Joyce Sidman and
Beckie Prange
Yes,
it's another kid's book, but WOW is it worth hanging out in the
children's section to plow through this super-cool book on nature's
ubiquitous underdogs. No, it's not about the super-weird, show-stopping,
mega-fauna a lot of kids’ books tend to showcase. From the lowly and
ancient diatom to the more newly erected Homo sapiens, these animals are
absolutely spectacular and shine in all their common glory.
7. Second Nature: The
Inner Lives of Animals by Jonathan Balcombe
This
is a great read that makes a persuasive argument for the very real and
highly complex inner lives of animals. Though it ultimately delves into
polemic (sense a theme?), I do believe it's among the best argument for
vegetarianism I've ever read. Unfortunately, Balcombe relies almost
exclusively on factory farming's humane and environmental failings to
make his case. Where's the backyard farmer, JB?
8. Farm
by Elisha Cooper
I
promise, my last book about food and farming. It’s also my last book on
this list for kids. It’s illustrated in gorgeous watercolors and is
perhaps the year's most evocative argument in favor of the slow food
movement.
9. Man in the Woods
by Scott Spencer
A
man and his dog at a rest stop. That's all I'm going to say. You won't
be able to put it down.
10. Duncan the Wonder Dog
by Adam Hines
It's
a graphic novel, but I promise you it's apropos for all ages beyond the
first, most sensitive decade. It's to do with a world in which animals
can speak their minds … and they do so eloquently on the subject of
their treatment by humans. Find it next to the manga section of your
local bookstore, or buy it on Amazon.
Yes, my choices run heavily towards children's lit, but doesn't most
of our best animal fiction? I think so, seeing as Black Beauty is
perhaps the best animal book ever written. But then, there's always room
for disagreement.
So, whatever your favorites are, whether they're this year's, last
year’s, or those you consider the best animal reads of all time, offer
them up below. Curious readers and last-minute gift-givers want to know.

Dr. Patty Khuly
P.S. - I just HAD to include this pic from Cheekunlol, since the book
in the shot (The Book Thief) happens to have been on my personal list of
the best books I read in 2009.
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