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In what is surely one of the most memorable and intelligent recent books about animal-human interaction, Hess (Lost and Found: Dogs, Cats and Everyday Heroes at a Country Animal Shelter) tells the story of Nim Chimpsky, who in the 1970s was the subject of an experiment begun at the University of Oklahoma to find out whether a chimp could learn American Sign Language-and thus refute Noam Chomsky's influential thesis that language is inherent only in humans. Nim was sent to live with a family in New York City and taught human language like any other child. Hess sympathetically yet unerringly details both the project's successes and failures, its heroes and villains, as she recounts Nim's odyssey from the Manhattan town house to a mansion in the Bronx and finally back to Oklahoma, where he was bounced among various facilities as financial, personal and scientific troubles plagued the study. The book expertly shows why the Nim experiment was a crucial event in animal studies, but more importantly, Hess captures Nim's "legendary charm, mischievous sense of humor, and keen understanding of human beings." This may well be the only book on linguistics and primatology that will leave its readers in tears over the life and times of its amazing subject. (Mar. 4)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationIn the 1970s, Herbert Terrace of Columbia University decided to challenge Noam Chomsky's widely accepted theory that the capacity for language is unique to the human species. Believing that a chimpanzee might acquire (sign) language ability in the proper reinforcing environment, Terrace undertook Project Nim and gave his male chimp the name of Nim Chimpsky-a clever pun on Chomsky's name. According to Hess, a journalist who writes about animals (Lost and Found: Dogs, Cats, and Everyday Heroes at a County Animal Shelter ), the infant Nim was initially treated just like a human baby. He lived in a home with a large family, bonded with his human mother, wore clothes, and eventually attended school-of sorts-to learn American Sign Language (ASL). Hess then documents how after four years of being the famous and charismatic subject of a language experiment, Nim nearly became an anonymous subject of medical experiments. Nim's engrossing life story deserves a place next to those of Koko and Washoe, who died last October, and is recommended for all public libraries. For another perspective on Project Nim's controversial nature and its linguistic legacy, see Roger Fouts's Next of Kin: What Chimpanzees Have Taught Me About Who We Are .-Cynthia Knight,Hunterdon Cty. Lib., Flemington, NJ
Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.Prologue: The Unexpected Birth of Nim Chimpsky 1
Introduction: Chimps Are Us 5
Part 1 Project Nim: New York City
Chapter 1 Early Days on the Chimp Farm 25
Chapter 2 Launching Project Nim 45
Chapter 3 "Brady Bunch-Plus Chimp" 65
Chapter 4 Trouble in the Family 95
Chapter 5 The Master of Delafield 115
Chapter 6 "Pull Tickle" 135
Part 2 The Institute for Primate Studies: Norman, Oklahoma
Chapter 7 Meanwhile, Back on the Farm 167
Chapter 8 Captivity 191
Chapter 9 Becoming a Norman Chimp 205
Chapter 10 The Fall of IPS 225
Chapter 11 Inside LEMSIP 257
Part 3 Sanctuary: Murchison, Texas
Chapter 12 The Black Beauty Ranch 279
Chapter 13 When Nim Met Sally 301
Where They Are Now 325
Notes 333
Bibliography 353
Acknowledgments 357
Photo Credits and Permissions 359
Index 361
Q: What was writing this book like? What about the process most surprised or illuminated you?
I had no idea how difficult it would be to write a biography of an animal! There are so few records kept on captive animals that pinning down dates of birth, transfers of ownership, health records—anything that should have been easy—was needlessly difficult. I also had to track down all the people who actually knew Nim and get their stories. And, needless to say, many of their stories conflicted so I had to sift through all the information on Nim and piece together his reality. I often felt like I was putting together pieces of a complicated puzzle. We project all kinds of things onto animals, which makes knowing them much more difficult. Nim’s people all loved him, but they had all lost track of him and their memories had faded into their feelings of tremendous guilt over having lost contact with him.
Q: Can you name the first book you read that inspired you in some special way? Why?
Black Beauty. It is still one of the most powerful books about the subject of humane treatment of animals. I remember reading it as a child and I read it to my daughter over and over. Also, Animal Liberation by Peter Singer. It’s a primer on animal rights that virtually started a movement in this country. And—a real favorite is Disgrace, by J.M. Coetzee. An intense and riveting novel about people, animals and survival.
Q: Can you tell us about the book you are working on now? And when you finish writing your answers to this Q&A, what will you do next?
I’m working on a book about pit bulls. The inspiration is a little dog named Lucy, an 8 year old pit bull, currently sleeping under my desk. A rescuer found her one year ago wandering the streets of Albany, sick and homeless. Now she will be with me for the rest of her life. (She joined my two other dogs—a golden retriever and a husky-mix—who can’t remember life without her.) In the year I’ve lived with Lucy, I’ve become fascinated by American Pit Bull Terriers. As everyone who lives with one knows, pit bulls are highly intelligent, extremely athletic, courageous, loving, and loyal. What else does one need in a dog? But it’s important to keep them away from the Michael Vicks of the world…I’m currently trying to find out how these dogs because the scapegoats for everything violent—everything that is wrong in our hardly ideal lives. What will I do now? Take the dogs for a good long walk. I do my best writing walking through a field behind my house as the dogs sniff for rabbits, birds, and sent of deer passing through.
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Posted July 20, 2011
I especially like the background stories out each place Nim stayed. It is about Nim, but the human stories about language study and ape research make it more interesting. I was afraid this may turn into an animal right rally book, but it is not and much more on the people involved. At the end, i definitely feel sorry for Nim, but truth that human and apes are different is also clear an made the outcome inevitable. If the passionate ape lovers could not live with the apes they raised from infancy, the idea of viewing apes as human is not different from our love for other pets.
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Posted April 3, 2008
Actually, I DID experience this book firsthand, and Elizabeth is quite accurate in her portrayal. Yes, there is a lot more that could be told, but that may have to be another book.
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Posted March 4, 2008
Well written some embellishment over all not bad. I think it¿s written more from Bill Lemmon¿s point of view and lacks much respect for what Fouts was trying to do relative to the cards that he was dealt. The real lesson here is how dysfunctional academic research can be when egos get in the way. Some great background stories are missing (or just miss reported) that could have tweaked the reader's opinion a little. But all in all it¿s a good read, especially for those of us who lived it.
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Overview
Now Elizabeth Hess’s unforgettable biography is the inspiration for Project Nim, a riveting new documentary directed by James Marsh and produced by Simon Chinn, the Oscar-winning team known for Man on Wire. Hess, a consultant on the film, says, “Getting a call from James Marsh and Simon Chinn is an author’s dream. Project Nim is nothing short of amazing.”Could an adorable chimpanzee raised from infancy by a human family bridge the gap between species—and change the way we think about the boundaries between the animal and human worlds? Here is the strange and moving account of an ...