Pages & Paws

Writing, Reading, and Rural Life With a Border Collie


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Timeless & Transcendent: ‘Born Free’ Still Touching Lives

Have you ever re-discovered a book from your childhood that still has the power to move and profoundly impact you, even a half century after your initial read? If so, then you’ve found a true classic.

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Joy Adamson’s Born Free: A Lioness of Two Worlds is such a book.

A Remarkable True Story

Evocative and compelling, Born Free is the remarkable true story of Elsa, an orphaned lion cub raised by Joy Adamson and her husband, George.

At its core, Born Free is a love story. With great sensitivity and precision, Adamson chronicles the mutual affection and bond between a magnificent lioness and the humans who loved her enough to set her free.

It’s probably the most moving and inspiring “animal story” I’ve ever read.

Joy Adamson wrote three books about African lions: Born Free, Living Free, and Forever Free. I read them all. Born Free is my favorite.

I first read Born Free in 1969, nine years after it was first published. I was in the fifth grade. Entranced, I read it over and over. There’s something timeless and transcendent about the story that’s difficult to put into words.

I lost track of Adamson and Elsa over the years. But I never forgot the extraordinary story of a free born lioness and the humans who loved her. I recently located a library copy of Born Free. Finally.

Elsa and “Born Free” author Joy Adamson.

 

Like a Ton of Bricks

Opening the Forward to the Fortieth Anniversary Edition (2000), I was startled to learn that Joy Adamson was stabbed to death by a disgruntled former employee in 1980. The news hit me like a ton of bricks. I felt like I’d lost a best friend I’d never met. So it was with a mixed sense of sadness and reverence that I sat in a sun-soaked living room in a far corner of the Pacific Northwest nearly forty years after that sad event and re-opened a book that profoundly impacted my life, especially with regard to animals.

Lavishly illustrated with black and white photographs, Elsa’s story is still an unforgettable one. So is Adamson’s prodigious writing talent. Her breezy, bucolic style recalls another formidable literary talent who writes so evocatively about her life in Kenya: Isak Dinesen. Like Dinesen, Adamson’s descriptions of her life as the wife of a senior game warden in East Africa have a luminous quality that is almost melodic.

My favorite photo from the book. Joy Adamson and Elsa.

I read Born Free cover to cover in one sitting. Here’s a key line, from page 109:

“Her (Elsa’s) good-natured temperament was certainly due in part to her character, but part too may have come from the fact that neither force nor frustration was ever used to adapt her to our way of life. For we tried by kindness alone to help her to overcome the differences that lie between our two worlds.”

The Adamsons and Elsa succeed beyond all expectations.

Patiently Waiting

Re-reading the last chapter, The Final Test, the same intense sense of sadness and loss these pages evoked in me five decades ago bubbled up again from some deep internal well. It was as if Elsa and her human pride had never left, patiently waiting 50 years for my return to their story.

Recording Elsa’s success in finding her own wild pride and mate, Adamson writes:

“We returned to camp alone, and very sad. Should we leave her now, and so close a very important chapter of our lives?”

The Adamsons decide to wait “a few more days” to make sure Elsa has been accepted by the pride.

In the final elegiac paragraph, Adamson returns to her “studio” by the river to continue writing the story of Elsa, “who had been with us until this morning.” Sad to be alone, the author writes that she tries to make herself happy “by imagining that at this very moment Elsa was rubbing her soft skin against another lion’s skin and resting with him in the shade, as she had often rested here with me.”

I cried. Again.

And that, friends, is the mark of a true classic.

 

Elsa on Camp Bed Photo Credit

 

 

Author’s note: This post was first published on Pages and Paws in June 2019. We thought it deserves a second run. – Mom and The Kimster


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BATTER UP! 10 Summer Hits & Misses

Woof-hoo! It’s summer time, summer time, sum-sum, summer time! Doo-whop, doo-whop.

Kimber here. Mom and I are celebrating August with something a little special. I was lobbying for filet mignon. But nooooo! Mom decided on a quick run-down on recently read titles. To save you some time. So you can avoid the clunkers. And enjoy the goodies.

Public domain

And hey. What’s summer without baseball, right? So I suggested we categorize titles as either Hits and Misses or as Strike Outs and Home Runs. Brilliant huh? (Mom helped a little. But it was mostly me.)

So here are five kinds of each book. Five duds. As in, swing-from-the-heels strike-outs and don’t waste your time. And five awesome-dawsome, tail-wagging, bonafide home runs. (One is somewhere in the middle, depending on which bat you choose.)

So… batter up!

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‘Outside the Law’ Hits a Bull’s Eye

Outside the Law

How an Ex-Cop Became America’s Most Prolific Bank Robber Since John Dillinger

By Mark Ogden and Paul Ogden (Amazon, June 2025)

Genre: Non-Fiction

Pages (Print): 245

Via: Author Request

“You do not see me. I am invisible!”

Mom! Mom! barketh I, Kimber the Magnificent. Dancing my patented Kimber Canine Jig. Tail wagging a mile a minute.

Mom: What’s up, Kimster?

Kimber: It’s a mega doughnut alert!

Mom: Doughnut alert? What the heck are you barking about, Kimmi?

Kimber: Oh, c’mon Mom! I’m talking about that new book we just finished. The one about the ex-Marine, ex-cop, ex-attorney who becomes a super-duper bank robber dude. It’s a four-alarm, honest-to-goodness humdinger of a doughnut alert.

Mom rolleth her eyes-eth.

Kimber: No, really. It goes like this:

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For the 4th: Stand Up & Cheer With This AMAZING True Story of Courage & Hope

Back in the Game:
One Gunman, Countless Heroes, and the Fight For My Life

By Congressman Steve Scalise with Jeffrey E. Stern (Hatchette Book Group, 2018)

Genre: Non-Fiction

Via: Library

Pages (print): 281

That one small entry wound belied a massive, mostly internal hemorrhage that was about to kill me. I’d be dead in a matter of minutes, unless someone with some kind of x-ray vision happened to show up and was somehow able to see all the bleeding that couldn’t be seen. I needed a miracle.

In gripping You Are There fashion, Back in the Game tells what happened when one man opened fire at a baseball practice for Republican members of Congress on the morning of June 14, 2014, wounding five and nearly killing one: Louisiana congressman and House Majority Whip Steve Scalise. And how Scalise fought his way back to the people’s House.

It’s Scalise’s moment by moment account of not only what happened to him, but of those who emerged in the seconds after the shooting began and worked to save his life and the lives of his colleagues and teammates when a lone gunman attempted the greatest political assassination in U.S. history.

The gunman came within a hair’s breadth of succeeding.

Kimber: Let me just say right out of the kennel that Back in the Game is a book about heroes. Like:

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Book Review: Grace (Eventually): Thoughts on Faith

Paperback Grace (eventually) - Thoughts On Faith Book

Grace (Eventually): Thoughts on Faith

By Anne Lamott

Riverhead Books, 2007.

We were going to write a review of Anne Lamott’s autobiographical collection of nearly two dozen essays and reflections, Grace (Eventually): Thoughts on Faith.  No, really.  We were.  We have four pages of notes to prove it- double-sided!  Then we thought we’d just to the chase.  So here it is:

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Joseph, Tennis Shoes & ‘Wear’ Everybody Knows Your Name

Joseph Wore Tennis Shoes

Stories From Small Town Journalism

By Dale Kovar

Genre: Non-fiction/Biography

Pages (print): 197, Inc. Appendices and Index

Via: Author Request

Note: We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Pour yourself a lemonade. Grab a chair. Sit down. Put your feet up. Breathe. And treat yourself to a stroll through small town Americana via this cogent and convivial look at events, people, places, and perspectives from a seasoned news pro with a 50-year career in newspapers. Brimming with warmth and wit, Jospeh Wore Tennis Shoes is part news. Part biography. Part trip down Memory Lane. And all heart.

The book covers the author’s 50-year career at Minnesota weekly newspapers with reprints of the best stories from over the years. Kovar takes you beyond the nuts and bolts of a weekly newspaper and into a wide variety of behind-the-scene stories and anecdotes. What emerges is an entertaining mix of Eureka! moments, belly laughs, guffaws, colorful reportage, and a few You have got to be kidding me-s. This collection may also have you grabbing a tissue or two.

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First-Hand Account of Everest Disaster a Riveting Read

The Climb

By Anatoli Boukreev and G. Weston DeWalt (St. Martin’s Press, 1997)

Genre: Non-Fiction

Pages: 255

Via; Library Book Sale

On May 10, 1996, two commercial expeditions headed by some of the finest, most experienced climbers in the world set off on the final leg of a five-day climb to the top of the world. Along the way, things went terribly wrong. Traffic jams along the route, miscommunications, inexplicable delays that burned up vital oxygen. Questionable leadership and decisions. A ferocious rogue storm. Time. All at the cruising altitude of a 747. All conspired to kill. Eight climbers from three expeditions died on Mount Everest while attempting to descend from the summit.

It remains one of the worst disasters in the history of Mount Everest.

Several survivors wrote memoirs after the disaster. Climber and journalist Jon Krakauer published his first-hand account of the tragedy in 1997, Into Thin Air.  It was a bestseller. Anatoli “Toli” Boukreev, a guide with Scott Fischer’s Mountain Madness team, felt impugned by the book.  Toli co-authored his version of events in The Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest, also published in 1997.

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Cornwallian Walk a Winner – or – Curmudgeons of the World, Untie!*

Walking Wet: A Journey Along England’s Salt Path
By Rick Rogers (2025)
Genre: Travel
Pages (Print): 208
Via: Author request
Note: We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
Heavy fogs. Dew. Drizzle. Sea spray. Sprinkles. Rain showers. Rain squalls. Cloudbursts. Steady rain. Occasional rain. Driving rain. Coming down in sheets, torrents, or buckets. Along 630 miles of English coastline known as the Southwest Coast Path, aka: The Salt Path.
Are we having fun yet?
You will in Rick Rogers’ latest tome, Walking Wet. We’ll get to that in a min. So kindly keep your hair on, Cookie. First a wee bit of background:
Some Background
We met Rick the Hiking Dude a few years back when we reviewed his book, Walking Home: Common Sense and Other Misadventures On the Pacific Crest Trail. You can read our full review here.
So when we heard that Hiking Dude has a new book out about his adventures hiking in Cornwall, we jumped at it. Like this:
Kimber: A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away…
Mom: Kimmi, what are you doing?
Kimber: I’m gearing up for a review of that new walking book by Mr. Walking Guy.
Mom: Okay. But I’m pretty sure George Lucas beat you to the punch on that opening line.
Kimber: George Who?
Times
Yes, friends. There are times when the serenity and simplicity of walking the English coastline does indeed feel like “a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.” In a really soggy galaxy, in fact, as evident in this lithe and lively tome by Rick Rogers.
More
Cuz this book is about a lot more than racking up miles on the ‘ole ankle express. Or in this case, soggy boots and squishy socks. Peering through his “agreeably comfortable and hazy absentmindedness,” Rogers takes us on a journey of resilience, reflection, and introspection. It’s all seasoned with light and laughter as only he can. Along the way Rogers fills us in on some of his personal background. Ditto smartphones and “the art of selective hearing.” (Kimber: Huh? What? You say something, Mom?) How hiking a long trail “is the perfect antidote” to living “inside the chatterbox.” (Kimmi: You rang?”) Much more.
Entertaining
Entertaining and eminently engaging, Walking Wet takes us on England’s 630-mile Southwest Coast Path, aka the Salt Path, with his son Matthew and sister Rhonda. Matthew is fourteen-years-old and less-than-thrilled to be here. Rhonda is a rehabbing heart patient.
Along the way, we’re treated to pages packed with observations on local flora and fauna, food, geography, customs and culture and architecture. Also dino eggs. Earworms. Burger King jingles. An investment banker from Scotland. Concrete pill boxes. Mayberry. Muppet. Curly. Eavesdropping cows. “Are you okay?” (You’ll get that if you read the book.) “Walker’s Brain happens.” Chiddleypump. The “home base-and-foray” hiking method. Ditto “muddy tramps under unruly rain squalls.” Sheltering from a nasty storm in the middle of a herd of dairy cows. Sulphury sea breezes.
When Matthew and Rhonda cut their trip short and fly home, Rogers continues the walk alone – for about 450 more miles.
There’s also rain. Lots and lots of rain. As in, 38 out of 39 hiking days it rained. So, you may want to grab a sweater. Or a trash bag. (You’ll also get that if you read the book.)
“I hiked the Pacific Crest Trail back home, and I met some folks out there hoping it would change their lives. But most of the time, it didn’t. Whatever it is that you find on a trail is difficult to hold on to when you leave it. Those things are often situational and ethereal, and they slip through your fingers when you get back home.”
Warm, Winsome
En route, Rogers serves up a warm and winsome combo of outdoor camping adventures and misadventures, memoirish musings, travel guide talking, and reflections on farming life and teenagers. In fact, the snappy back-and-forth between the author and his son Matthew will sound familiar to anyone with teenagers. (Take two Tylenol and call me in seven years.)
There’s also:
– Tetley tea and Irish coffee.
– Mandolin music.
– Playing chicken with “wrong side” vehicles trying to kill you.
“Doers can also be dreamers.”
– Ross and Demelza! (Sort of.)
– “Tony Orlando and Dawn.”
– Andy Taylor.
– Exorbitant rise in home prices.
– Chocolate cake with frosting for breakfast. (Mom: I’m in!)
– Vertigo.
– Texting.
– Face-timing and video chatting.
– PODs (Photos of the Day).
– The snail whisperer.
– The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.
– “Emma, the Oracle of Understatements.”
Nothing gives you a sense of belonging like sharing wine in a circle of kind souls and their dogs in a building that’s housed countless similar scenes, re-enacted by generations through the eight centuries of its existence.
Also ruminations about fatherhood and parenting a teenager later in life. Notes on the topography, history, culture and cuisine of the region skim the story amid nearly non-stop storms and wet weather. For example, shifting sand and the author’s “chronic anxiety about tomorrow’s world” and how son Matthew’s generation will “navigate themselves within it” – while Rogers is being blasted by raindrops and soaked to the skin.
It felt like home, a place to curl up in. It felt like it should. It felt like enough.
POV
Told in the first person, Walking Wet includes stops in Personal Reflection and Introspection. There’s a lot of room to connect here for readers of a certain age. Pages will also resonate with any parent who’s raised or is raising a teenager and lived to tell the tale. (Don’t ask how we know that.)
Perhaps some of the most fascinating portions of Walking Wet are the author’s observations on the differences between hiking the PCT and hiking the Salt Path. And we don’t mean just weather. Good stuff!
Style
The narrative style is a little Peter Jenkins’ A Walk Across America with a chaser of Bill Bryson’s A Walk in the Woods. Or maybe it’s the other way around? Anywho, the style is piquant. Pithy. And percolating with wry wit. Razor-sharp writing propels the narrative forward like … a hurricane on the Cornish coast. The tone is light-hearted in places and pensive in others. Maps are provided so you can follow along. Chapters are headed with helpful stats like days walking, path miles walked, and total miles walked.
Poldarkian!
So whether you’re a long-distance hiker looking for your next challenge, a casual stroller scouting a vicarious walking adventure, or a hapless Poldarkian (Kimber: New word I just made up. Hi, Mom), you’ll find all of the above and much more in this engaging and enjoyable tome.
The storm raged, but where I stood in it now made moving through it easier. I was reminded again that how badly a storm hits you has less to do with the force of its wind than it does with where you stand when you’re in it.
Extras
You can find photos, videos and info. for each path section in its respective chapter. You can find more here along with some other cool stuff related to Walking Wet.
Speaking of “finding,” we found a stray typo or two roaming the paper countryside. But no biggie. We found the following paragraph confusing. On page ii:
“This is largely a work of fiction. Unless otherwise indicated, all the names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents in this book are the product of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.”
Wait. What?
And that ‘goosey bagpipe’ thing? Not. Funny.
Kimmi’s Question
That being said, Kimber has one question: When is Rick the Hiking Dude gonna head back across the pond and walk the (Thomas) Hardy Way, “meandering or no”?
Soaked in waggish wit, this clever and keen book had one of us laughing so hard in places, she snorted lemonade out her nose. Indeed, Walking Wet is a delightful read for anyone who enjoys “their wit dry, their socks wet, and warmhearted misadventures laced with doubt, resilience, and the occasional perfect pint.” This one’s a winner.
Mom: I’d bring a rain slicker ‘fize you. And extra socks. Just sayin’ again.
Kimber: About that Lucas guy and that galaxy far, far away. Do they have burgers?
*That’s not a typo. It’s deliberate. As in, untie your shoe laces. Grab a hot cuppa. And give this book a whirl. Got that, Cupcake?
Pages & Paws Rating
Our Rating: 4.0
Cornwall photo credit: Public domain


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Prepare to be Blown Away by ‘The Lucky Seven’

The Lucky Seven

By Norman W. Holden

Published by: Indie, June 2023

Genre: Non-Fiction – Biography/History

Pages: 380

We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

 

Suit up and strap in for an incredible ride and harrowing close calls when a heavy bomber is mortally wounded and the crew bails out over occupied Belgium in this World War II stunner. Exciting and absorbing, The Lucky Seven is a remarkable story of courage, sacrifice, and heroism. It’s one of the best World War II stories we’ve ever read. And we’ve read a ton.

Grounded in “true wartime events,” The Lucky Seven is the story of First Lieutenant James J. Goebel, Jr. and the brave men and women of the Belgian and French Resistance. Much of the book covers Goebel’s evade and escape experiences after Goebel and his crewmen parachute out of their wounded B-24 over occupied Belgium.

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Missed Opportunities in ‘Russian Legacy’ Memoir

Thread of Life: My Russian Legacy

By Jennifer Kavanaugh (CollectiveInk, 2025)

Genre: Non-fiction/Memoir

Pages: 153 + Chronology and For Further Reading

Via: Author/Publicity Request

Note: We received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

“This is a story of contrasts: the beauty of St. Petersburg and the brutality which took place within its walls; the gentle beauty of Dora and the atrocity of her treatment. A story that gives glimpses of the paradoxes of the human spirit: the ugliness and beauty of which humanity is capable…”

Thread of Life looks at the 20th century through the lives of three Jewish women. At its heart is Dora, a romantic and tragic figure, a concert pianist born in Riga, Latvia. She lived in St Petersburg and was killed in the Riga Holocaust. Her daughter is Genia. Born in 1915 in St. Petersburg, Genia lived in many places around the world before dying in England at the age of 102. It’s also about the author and her life and perspectives.

A thoughtful weft of memory, history, love, loss, and learning, this memoir includes insights from the author in which she shares her moments of discovery while addressing themes of Russia, Jewishness, motherhood, music, home, and language, as well as the vagaries of memory.

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