Zamba: The True Story of the Greatest Lion That Ever Lived
Zamba: The True Story of the Greatest Lion That Ever Lived
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Paperback ©2005--
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HarperCollins
Annotation: Describes the author's experiences after adopting a two-month old lion cub who later appeared in movies, on television, and in numerous commercials.
Genre: [Biology]
 
Reviews: 4
Catalog Number: #4543471
Format: Paperback
Publisher: HarperCollins
Copyright Date: 2005
Edition Date: 2006 Release Date: 06/27/06
Pages: x, 258 pages
ISBN: 0-06-076133-4
ISBN 13: 978-0-06-076133-2
Dewey: 599.757
LCCN: 2004054341
Dimensions: 21 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews

An object lesson in living peacefully with animals, even a lion. Fifty years ago, Helfer ( Modoc , 1997) was a revolutionary: a trainer who relied on trust and respect, not the standard fear training. He developed a positive relationship with his animal companions through what he calls "affection training," encouraging in his charges the patience and understanding to deal with humans. Helfer got a chance to test his theory when some friends brought an orphaned African lion cub named Zamba to his Santa Monica ranch. His fellow trainers called him a fool. The lion would turn on him, they warned, as soon as he was old enough to consider Helfer dinner rather than benefactor. It never happened. Helfer and Zamba went on to become motion picture and television legends. During their 18 years together, they had many adventures, from designing a bed big enough for the two of them (the lion was a bed hog) to a bit of dentistry, which quickly reminded Helfer that Zamba was still an animal, more than willing to remove a finger if it got in his mouth while an abscess was being extricated. A 1960 shoot in Africa for a movie called The Lion commands the second half of the text. The days were long enough to make Zamba cranky, and there were snakes in the garden as well. At one point, Zamba was kidnapped, only to be abandoned when the kidnappers realized their charge wasn't exactly docile. With so much attention lavished on this extraordinary lion, it comes as a shock to learn that Helfer's farm is home to more than 1,500 animals, all of which get the same kind of care as Zamba. The last pages describe a horrific flood at the ranch that could have erased all of Helfer's good works. Beautifully expresses a simple philosophy so many have trouble following: respect for all living creatures, given and returned.

School Library Journal

Adult/High School-From a young age, Helfer had a way with animals and an urge to work with them. After an inauspicious start as a teen helper in a Los Angeles pet store, he gradually acquired animals that movie studios used in their productions. He was the first Hollywood animal trainer to use affection rather than fear. He showed that his method worked better, and now, of course, it has become commonly accepted. He even turned an orphaned lion cub into a vegetarian for a brief period, to test a theory. Over the years, Zamba appeared in many movies and television commercials and shows, riding to jobs in the back of Helfer's station wagon, uncaged. The author reminds readers that wild animals are never thoroughly predictable and are not house pets; even Zamba surprised him occasionally, although never in a dangerous way. The special bond between these two mammals; Helfer's ideas about animal-human communication and understanding; and the many stories, both humorous and touching, make this a fascinating book.-Judy McAloon, Potomac Library, Prince William County, VA Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Word Count: 78,257
Reading Level: 6.5
Interest Level: 9+
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 6.5 / points: 13.0 / quiz: 105186 / grade: Upper Grades
Zamba
The True Story of the Greatest Lion That Ever Lived

Chapter One

I have spent my life living and working peacefully with animals. But one of my most formative learning experiences was an incidentthat ended with me in the hospital.

I was in my late teens. I was doing stunts and assisting other trainers with their animals, and I was offered a job as a stuntman for a Hollywood studio. They asked that I work an adult male lion on a pedestal, just as is done in the circus. They wanted him to snarl and swipe at me a few times.

I told them I'd be happy to, but for one problem: I had no lion.I said thanks anyhow and hung up.

Later that day the studio called again. They said that they'd found a lion. The man who owned him would be out of town for the day of the shoot, but he knew of me and felt I could do the stunt. He said that the lion, who was called Rex, was old and would respond to certain basic commands. The handler who'd be bringing Rex to the shoot could tell me everything I needed to know.

I could hardly contain my excitement. I had been obsessed with lions since childhood, and I held them in the highest esteem, more than any other creature. To me they represented the best that nature had to offer. Their regal attitude, proud stance, strength, and dignity always made me feel I was in the presence of royalty, and I felt a real spiritual connection to them -- I felt called to work with them.

I have always been convinced that very real communication betweenhumans and animals is possible, and I was sure that working with a lion was my own key to that interaction. But at that time in my career I hadn't yet set foot in an arena with any animal, let alone with a lion. And this job wasn't the way I had imagined my first solo interaction with a lion would be. I knew that this animal had been "fear trained," and working with an animal that had been tamed with cruelty and violence went against all my principles. Ialso realized that it had the potential to be very, very dangerous.

In spite of my reservations, the studio made it hard to refuse the job. They said I was just the right size, and they offered me a good deal of money. Times were rough. I had acquired a number of small animals -- raccoons, opossums, kinkajous, a red-tailed hawk, and a small mountain lion -- and my expenses had escalated. I reasoned with my conscience: after all, I hadn't had anything to do with the lion's training, and I certainly wouldn't be hurting him. In fact, it could be the other way around. I accepted.

The hard part was telling my girlfriend.

"Ralph, you're an idiot! This is an incredibly stupid thing to do.You don't know the lion, and he's never met you. You can't get instructionsfrom some guy five minutes before you go into the ring to work a lion."

"The trainer said it won't be a problem, and I really need themoney."

"We don't need it that badly. You're going to get yourself killed."

Sweet, athletic Laura had helped me build my small collection of animals. We argued for hours, until she finally gave up on me.

"Go ahead -- kill yourself. Enjoy your short career."

In my heart, I knew she was right. But I needed the money, and I wanted to prove to myself that I could do it. Although I didn't agree with the methods of trainers who used fear, I had seen what they did and how they did it, and I felt I could mimic their commands. I didn't need to abuse the animal -- I was just going to be following the directions I was given, issuing commands that the owner had trained the lion to respond to years before. The handler who accompanied the lion would tell me what to do and how to do it, and I'd be home by lunch.

On the day of the shoot, when I arrived at the studio I noticed a pickup truck and trailer parked near the entrance to the big soundstage. Actually, it wasn't the pickup I noticed so much as the enormous African lion pacing in a large portable cage nearby, jaws dripping with saliva. A man dressed in a pair of well-worn jeans, a striped Western shirt, cowboy boots, and a broad-brimmed hat stood near the cage. The telltale string coming out of his shirt pocket meant he was carrying a small bag of "Bullderm" chewingtobacco.

I introduced myself and asked how the lion was feeling. The handler cocked his hat back on his balding head and said, "Well, okay, I guess."

"You guess?" I questioned.

"Well, yeah, a bit restless, but ... "He hesitated. "He's okay."

A squirt of tobacco juice landed on the ground near me. "Whendo these people pay us?" he asked.

I'd seen this type of guy hanging around the barns at some ofthe animal compounds. He was a mess of uncouth habits and flaunted his couldn't-care-less attitude.

"I think they'll pay by check in about a week," I said.

Another stream of spit hit the dirt.

I saw the situation for what it was. This fellow needed money,and he'd let me work the lion -- even if it was unsafe -- just to get it.I felt a strange sensation in my stomach. But I didn't back out. In the next two minutes he told me all that he knew about Rex, which was how to get him to sit on the pedestal, cuff at me with his paw, and snarl.

"That's it," he said.

"That's it?"

"That's it -- no big deal."

"Has he ever been handled?"

"You mean touched?"

I nodded yes.

"Are you crazy? He'd kill you!"

My opinion of this guy sank even lower -- and my nervesweren't improving ...

Zamba
The True Story of the Greatest Lion That Ever Lived
. Copyright © by Ralph Helfer. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Excerpted from Zamba: The True Story of the Greatest Lion That Ever Lived by Ralph Helfer
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

When Ralph Helfer, now one of Hollywood's top animal behaviorists, first began working, he was shocked by the cruelty that was accepted practice in the field. He firmly believed in "affection training" -- that love, not fear, should be the basis of any animal's development, even when dealing with the most dangerous of creatures. Then Zamba came into his life -- an adorable four-month-old lion cub that went on to prove Helfer's theories resoundingly correct.

Over the next eighteen years, Zamba would thrive and grow, and go on to star in numerous motion pictures and television shows -- all the while developing a deep and powerful bond of love and affection with the man who raised him. By turns astonishing, hilarious, and poignant, Zamba is not only the unforgettable story of the relationship that Helfer would come to consider one of the most important in his life but also that of the amazing career and adventures of the greatest lion in the world.


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