Having recently read Gerald Durrell's memoir instalment, Three Singles To Adventure, I was delighted to read his wife's account of how it came to be written as a desperate move to earn money to support the pair and their wildlife.
Jacquie writes in the style of a well bred young lady, whose northerly upbringing may have made her better suited than others for the hardships of life on the move. She recounts how she got to know the man she alternately refers to as Gerry and Durrell, and how her father cut her off for wanting to marry him so that the pair actually eloped. By that time the young man had been travelling and bringing back animals for zoos, and wanted to establish his own breeding collection as he could see that the increase in the human population and agriculture was destroying animal habitat; some of the creatures we meet in the book are threatened, nearly extinct or thought extinct and then rediscovered.
Look for footnotes by Gerald giving his amused comments on the text. This is fair play because when he got around to writing up his continuing adventures, his wife was prompting him, reminding him of their dance with the Fon of Bafut and so on, then either typing the book up or arranging for radio presentations, and TV filming of another expedition. The story includes the couple's travels to Argentina and Bafut, their arranging to rent a premises on Jersey to house a zoo, and the start of the Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust.
While there are fewer animals shown as individuals in this tale than in Gerald's writings, that is fine because he was the naturalist and his wife the long-suffering administrator. Some fun aspects of the period are ringing up one's bank to arrange travel on cargo ships to South America - I think my bank would be baffled if I did that - and meeting Laurence Durrell, author and Foreign Office member, plus dealing with agents, publishers and the BBC.
Enjoy! Gerald Durrell's animal collecting memoirs are being re-released in e-book format so you can read them and laugh your head off.
This is an unbiased review.