From Kirkus Reviews:
A trainer with two stolen elephants eludes a police search for five years. Murray Hill was well known in the fraternity of animal trainers--he had been on the road for 30 years with elephants, in circuses, movies, and TV commercials. In 1980, deciding to retire, he reluctantly put his last two elephants--females named Duchess and Tory--up for sale. Hill had brought them to his Missouri farm 16 years earlier; one had been 30 inches high and had been on a bottle her first two years. When father-and-son Californians Dick and Eddie Drake made an offer--$100,000 for the elephants and their specially built trailer--Hill called cronies and was told that the Drakes were good with animals. Financing the purchase, he stipulated that the Drakes were not to mistreat the elephants. When the Drakes fell a number of payments behind, Hill went to collect and found both elephants nervous and frightened, suffering from infected hook wounds (Hill himself controlled them entirely with verbal commands) and foot rot. Under cover of night, Hill drove away with the elephants. When Drake sued and a judge ruled that Hill had to return the animals, Hill went into hiding rather than see ``the girls'' abused. The story of Hill's five fugitive years is expertly told here by novelist Ross (Tears of the Moon, 1988), who also reveals much that is fascinating about Hill's world: how elephants are trained; how periodic testosterone floods turn bull elephants into killers; how African and Asian elephants differ; and, most vividly (as seen through Hill's diary), how Duchess and Tory each boasted an idiosyncratic personality. Eventually, the FBI traced Hill to a Texas farm; Duchess and Tory were given to the Drakes, and Hill was tried for theft. A thoughtful adventure not only for animal lovers but for anyone who enjoys offbeat tales. (Film rights sold; eight pages of b&w photographs--not seen.) -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly:
Ross's ( Fears of the Moon ) account of a bitter feud is the stuff of muckraking tabloids, and the elephants are the book's only endearing characters. Once a nightclub accordion player, Arlan Seidon (aka Murray Hill) became an animal handler in middle age, acquiring exotic beasts and booking their appearances across the U.S. His legal troubles began in 1984, when, at age 50, he decided to retire, and sold his trailer rig and two female Asian elephants, Tory and Dutchesssp correct , to father-and-son animal trainers Dick and Eddie Drake. When the Drakes defaulted and Murray repossessed his property, he discovered that Tory and Dutchess had been harshly abused. In court, a judge later discredited for bias in the case awarded the Drakes both rig and elephants; a flabbergasted Murray, desperate to protect "the girls," hid them until he was captured by the FBI in late 1989. Now the Drakes have the elephants, but Murray, we're told, is considering an appeal. Latrine humor, stubbornness and immaturity on both sides, and mockery of animal-rights activists may irritate readers; Murray's own journal entries--close observations of the elephants' behavior and health--constitute the book's intimate, informative segments. Photos not seen by PW . Film rights to Guber-Peters Productions/Columbia Pictures; author tour.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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