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Monthly Archives: April 2024

Tommy Tomlinson on Dogs, Humans, and the Making of Dogland 

April 29, 2024 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

When I read the news about the recent publication of Tommy Tomlinson’s Dogland:  Passion, Glory, and Lots of Slobber at the Westminster Dog Show, I immediately took notice. I have been a fan of Tommy’s writing since his days at The Charlotte Observer.  From 1997 to 2012, Tommy wrote a column that appeared in the paper three times a week. In 2005, he was named a Pulitzer Prize Finalist “for his provocative columns with a wide-ranging human touch.” Tommy’s ability to bring the “human touch” to the topics he writes about is very much in evidence in Dogland. 

Ostensibly, Dogland is a behind-the-scenes account of the Westminster Dog Show and all the events leading up to this show, but it is also a thoughtful reflection of the special bond between humans and dogs.  For much of the book, Tommy explores the relationships between show dogs and their handlers.  However, he also writes about his relationship with a dog that he rescued named Fred.  In my opinion, Tommy’s account of Fred’s final days is the most moving passage in the book.

In addition to writing about the world of show dogs, Tommy delves into the history of how humans and dogs first got together about 30,000 years ago.  He argues that this bond between humans and dogs has had a transformative impact on both humans and dogs.

I reached out to Tommy and asked him for more information about how he came to write Dogland.  Here is what he sent to me:

Years ago, I was watching a dog show on TV and a question popped into my head: Are those dogs happy? That was the start of a three-year journey into what I came to call Dogland–the traveling carnival of dog shows that criss-crosses the country, culminating in the Westminster Dog Show, the most prestigious dog show in America.

I set out to learn not only about the dog-show world, but about the 30,000-year history of dogs and their people. That included a lot of research, a lot of interviews, and a lot of time at dog shows. One of those shows was in Concord, where I talked to a dog owner and handler named Michelle Parris about the loss of one of her favorite Italian greyhounds while the chaos of the show swirled around us–including a giant Newfoundland who really, really needed to take a poop.

I hope that when people read Dogland they’ll end up with a better understanding of why dog-show devotees love what they do … and how it is that dogs and people have formed such an intense bond over the years. We invented dogs, and in a very real sense, they invented us.

For readers who are interested in hearing Tommy talk about Dogland, Park Road Books is holding an in-person discussion and book signing at 7:00 p.m. on Thursday, May 23, 2024.  Tommy will be in conversation with author Joe Posnanski.  For more information about this event, please click on the following link:  https://www.parkroadbooks.com/event/tommy-tomlinson-discusses-his-new-book-dogland-joe-posnanski

I congratulate Tommy on the publicationof Dogland. I highly recommend Tommy’s latest book to anyone in Storied Charlotte who has an interest in the special relationship between humans and dogs. 

Tags: Dog Books

JuliAnna Ávila’s New Book on Vaquero Horsemanship

April 20, 2024 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

Dr. JuliAnna Ávila often refers to herself as a horse person.  I first met JuliAnna about fifteen years ago when she was interviewing for a position in English education at UNC Charlotte.  Since I was on the search committee, we had several conversations about the possibility of her coming to Charlotte.  Even then, she wanted to know if it would be possible for her to find a place outside of the city where she could keep a horse.  She joined the English Department in 2010, and a few years later she acquired a horse named Angel. 

Over the years, JuliAnna and I often talked about her horse. During these conversations, she mentioned her interest in Vaquero horsemanship, which is a traditional approach to training and caring for horses that emphasizes the importance of developing a bond between the rider and the horse. JuliAnna expressed a desire to write a book on this topic, and I encouraged her to pursue this idea. Well, I am pleased to report that she wrote the book and Purdue University Press just published it under the title Fine Horses and Fair-Minded Riders: Modern Vaquero Horsemanship as part of its New Directions in Human-Animal Bond series.  For more information about the book, see here.

I recently contacted JuliAnna and asked her about how she came to write Fine Horses and Fair-Minded Riders.  Here is what she sent to me:

In 2012, I found the horse who started me on the journey to researching Vaquero Horsemanship on a small farm about 30 miles southeast of Charlotte. I arrived at UNC Charlotte in 2010, and that was the first time that I really started venturing outside of the city. As soon as I started looking for a boarding barn for Angel, I learned quickly that you don’t need to travel far outside of Charlotte to find semi-rural and rural horse country (Waxhaw is probably the closest example of this but certainly not the only one). I grew up in Los Angeles and having horses there means that they are very often squeezed into human-sized spaces since land is so expensive and, overall, it is just terribly crowded—clearly far less than ideal for horses. Owning a horse while living in Charlotte meant that, a relatively short drive away, there were places where horses could live more like horses—outside 24/7 with grass and friends and some space to move around. I thought that that was a wonderful aspect of life in the Charlotte area–that there were so many beautiful farms and agricultural areas around it. 

And the study that led to this book started in the Charlotte area since I began by talking to the horsepeople I knew; they then recommended others to talk to in expanding geographical circles that began in North and South Carolina and then the southeast and then the western U.S., as the final stage of my project included the teachers and mentors of my original group of study participants. After several years of interviewing and collecting the stories of riders who study and practice Vaquero Horsemanship, I’ve written this book; this all began with driving out to see a sweet, spirited, red mare on a lovely, ordinary spring day.

I congratulate JuliAnna on the publicationof Fine Horses and Fair-Minded Riders:  Modern Vaquero Horsemanship. Although it is published by a university press, it is not a book that is intended exclusively for academics. As JuliAnna stated in a recent interview, “Even though I am an academic, I tried to write it for a general audience who are interested in horses and horsemanship.”  In my opinion, JuliAnna’s book should appeal to anyone in Storied Charlotte who has an interest in the special relationship between horses and humans. 

Tags: Vaquero Horsemanship

Alan Rauch, Sloths, and Earth Day

April 13, 2024 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

Since 1970, Earth Day has taken place on the 22nd day of April.  In thinking about the upcoming celebration of Earth Day, I am reminded that planet Earth is home not just to humans but to countless other animals as well.  The relationship between humans and other animals is a topic of great concern to my friend and colleague Alan Rauch, who is a professor in the English Department at UNC Charlotte.  In addition to publishing scholarship on Victorian literature and culture, Alan has written extensively in the field of animal studies, including his recently published Sloth.  This book received a glowing review in Publishers Weekly. The reviewer writes, “in this amusing and informative entry in Reaktion’s Animal series, Rauch explores the behavior, anatomy, and evolution of sloths . . . Animal lovers will be entranced.” I reached out to Alan and asked him to comment on his interest in animal studies, his new book about sloths, and his thoughts on the importance of Earth Day.  Here is what he sent to me:

We are all engaged with animals—to say nothing about the “environment” in general–in everything we do. On Earth Day, as on every day, if we don’t pay serious attention to what we are wearing, or eating, or fishing and hunting, or even exterminating we are simply not acting responsibly. Sometimes it’s easier to bring these issues to mind, but we often avoid addressing our own interconnections with the natural world.

I can’t trace back my initial fascination with animals to a specific period in my life; I don’t recall time when I didn’t want to know more about dogs, cats, horses, dinosaurs, marine mammals, and even sloths.  The question of how animals influence any of us is, to say the least, complicated.  I can say, with certitude, that growing up in Canada, where animals were always foregrounded, was critical to me. Animals were always, quite literally, in hand.  A caribou has distinguished the Canadian quarter since time immemorial (except when, in 1967, a beautiful engraving of a Canada Lynx was featured).  The beaver (Canada’s national animal) is almost synonymous with the nickel.  And now, as virtually everyone knows, the dollar coin or “Loonie” honors the elegant and sonorous loon.  Even the paper currency had a series that featured the birds of Canada.  Everyone in Canada, a nation that honored its wildlife, touched a representation of an animal on a daily basis and that necessarily had a lasting impact on its citizenry.

To be sure, I was perhaps more smitten than most. Beyond dinosaurs and horses, I was fascinated by whales and dolphins and as one of the youngest members of the Montréal Zoological Society, I joined excursions to Tadoussac, a town halfway up St. Lawrence River, to see a gathering of whales at the mouth of Saguenay River where there were belugas by the score, as well as Minke, Sei, and even Blue whales. Those trips and others (e.g. to see thousands of snow geese preparing for migration) were exhilarating and life changing. But I was no less in awe of muskrats, porcupines, chipmunks, and even squirrels all of which remain enthralling to this day.

Of course, aside from giant ground sloths (which disappeared 13,000 years ago), Canada was a “sloth-free” nation.  But fortunately for me there was a fossil of a giant ground sloth in the Redpath Museum, where I attended classes as a biology student at McGill University.  That creature, a Megatherium, was a conundrum! How was it, I wondered, that a 19-foot-tall creature that roamed the Americas could be related to a group of very small and sluggish animals limited to Central and northern South America?  Paleontologists have still not answered that question satisfactorily. But it is worth noting, as I did for years, that virtually every natural history museum features, often near the entrance, a replica of a giant sloth.  Why?  Oddly enough I tried to answer that question not as a zoologist, but as a scholar of Victorian Studies and published my theory on that topic in an essay called “The Sins of Sloth.” 

But once captivated by sloths they won’t let go and I became determined to write about all sloths not merely as historical artifacts or the loveable subjects of children’s books, but as critical members of our environmental and cultural lives.  I volunteered at a sloth rescue center in Costa Rica and worked with the Sloth Institute; I solicited dozens of images, and delved into years (perhaps slothfully) of research.  The resultant book, Sloth (Reaktion Books, 2023) is, I hope, one of the most comprehensive works about an animal that is not only compelling but, like all other animals, essential to our lives.

The sloth’s status as a meme for “cuteness” or for casual indifference seems to the dominant theme of most representations of the sloth in Western culture.  T-shirts abound with slogans like “Live slow” or “I’m not Lazy, I’m just energy efficient” abound, although the latter point about energy efficiency is well-taken.  But T-shirts aside, we need a more nuanced understanding of the sloth as a well-adapted organism in a very complex environment.  What makes that environment particularly complex and troubling, is the extent to which it is threatened by deforestation, pollution, and even eco-tourism.  One can only hope that the many “attractions” of the sloth and its wonderful appeal in social media will eventually result in a more nuanced understanding of them as organisms rather than disembodied memes or living “toys” for human amusement. That point is as much a reason for Earth Day as any, and whether our awareness or responsibility begins with sloths, or dolphins, or even Canada’s haunting loon, we should all be motivated to environmental action.

As we celebrate Earth Day here in Storied Charlotte, I think that we should join Alan in remembering that we share our planet with many other living beings and act accordingly. 

Tags: Earth Day

Jack Claiborne’s New Memoir about Growing Up in a Changing Charlotte

April 07, 2024 by Mark West
Categories: Storied Charlotte

When I learned about the recent publication of Jack Claiborne’s Charlotte, the Slugger and Me:  A Coming-of-Age Story of a Southern City and Two Tenacious Brothers, I immediately flashed back to my introduction to Claiborne’s writings about Charlotte.  As soon as I moved to Charlotte in the summer of 1984, I subscribed to The Charlotte Observer, and that’s when started reading his weekly column. Titled “This Time and Place,” this column ran in the paper from 1970 to 1990.   In this column, Claiborne wrote about the people and history of Charlotte, and his column helped me better understand the city that has since become my permanent home. 

Charlotte, the Slugger, and Me: Coming-of-Age Story of a Southern City and Two Tenacious Brothers

In his new memoir, Claiborne tells the story of how he and his brother Jimmy (who came to be known as Slug) moved to Charlotte in 1936 following the death of their father. At the time he was just five and his brother was four.  They grew up together in a city that was not yet known as a New South city, but it was already a city that was rapidly changing.  Claiborne devotes much of his memoir to discussing how he and his brother were influenced by the development of the city.  As he recalls, both brothers found opportunities in this fast-changing Charlotte. Claiborne built a career as a journalist with The Charlotte Observer while his brother became one of Charlotte’s leading restaurateurs. 

Dannye Romine Powell recently interviewed Claiborne about his new memoir.  This interview appeared in The Charlotte Observer on March 24, 2024.  Toward the end of the interview, she asked the following question: “You describe Charlotte of the 1930s and 1940s as a ‘welcoming place where you didn’t need a fortune or a pedigree to make friends or find favor.” Does today’s Charlotte retain some of those features?” Here is his response:

Oh, yes.  Charlotte is still an open and inviting city.  Its leaders are still people who came here from elsewhere.  There is no ruling class of “Old Charlotte” sachems managing things behind the scenes.  District representation ensures that all parts of the city are heard from on vital issues.

For readers who are interested in hearing Claiborne talk about his memoir, the Myers Park Library is sponsoring an event called “An Evening with Jack Claiborne, Retired Charlotte Observer Associate Editor.”  This event will take place on Tuesday, April 30, 2024, from 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm.  Registration is required.  For more information about this event, please click on the following link:  https://cmlibrary.bibliocommons.com/events/65f30279ad1be248855a33eb

Charlotte, the Slugger and Me is not Claiborne’s only book about Charlotte.  He also wrote The Charlotte Observer: Its Time and Place, 1869-1986 (2012), Crown of the Queen City:  The Charlotte Chamber from 1870 to 1999 (1999), and Jack Claiborne’s Charlotte (1974).  Anyone who wants to know more about the history of Storied Charlotte should acquaint themselves with the writings of Jack Claiborne.

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