Posted on 06/18/2016 3:47:12 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
No, no, FRiend, not the same.
Not the same species, not the same genus even.
Hardly the same family.
That would be Homo PoliticoSocialisticus a type of viral infection.
;-)
I had completely forgotten about that. A little literary convenience to keep reality at bay.
I wish I had her scholarship, and enough talent to write a reality based prehistory docunovel. The reason she was temporarily successful was she came close to the mark, but stopped creating the character, started having her own escapist fantasy pretending she was in her character’s moccasins.
Jim Kjelgaard wrote a good one, kind of the same premise, for the teen market.
https://www.amazon.com/Fire-Hunter-Jim-Kjelgaard/dp/B00005VWW4
Same kind of premise. Pre-historic genius invents spear thrower, domesticates dog, discovers poison projectile...
A good read, but short.
She has been financially extremely successful, hasn’t she?
The novels fit into the fantasy-feminist view of life.
She sold 45 million books by 2010. Personal income from them has likely been over $50 million, not including movie rights.
She did not publish a novel until 44 years old.
I was pleased to learn that she is happily married with 5 children.
Yeah, I didn’t post that one, for one thing, I’m not a fan of the macaque, or to tell the truth, of the chimp either (the latter use sharp sticks to kill and eat bushbabies).
Instead of a hominim, one of her neighbors was a Vitameatavegemin.
I have seen several reports that William Frawley (Fred) and Vivian Vance (Ethel) really disliked one another.
The were real professional actors. So they were able to work with someone they disliked for good money.
On the subject of Disneyfying nature, aside from the recent alligator incident, I had an interesting observation in Orlando around 35 year ago. There was an island in a lake with big birds including turkey, flamingo, Maribou Stork, and peacocks. I went there 3 times during on week. The first time there was a mother duck with about 25 ducklings swimming in a channel. The second time I was there about 18 young. As I was watching, a Maribou Stork suddenly speared one and ate it. A woman standing nearby yelped in astonishment and said something like, “Oh, no, this is real life that big bird just ate the baby duck.” On my third visit the mother duck had only 11 chicks. These all had the habit of swimming close to their mother, unlike the first time I saw them when they were scattered over a fair distance.
The Haile-Selassie referred to was no doubt a younger relative. I seem to recall reading that a son or grandson had become a paleontologist or archaeologist.
Yes, the bulk of the American population has now grown up in cities where food comes from a store.
Up to two generations ago, the bulk of Americans had intimate experience with processing food and meat.
Not any more.
The Haile-Selassie in the article refers to an institute or other educ org either named after *the* Haile Selassie (ganja, mon) or still referred to by that name (Addis Ababa University was named after him from 1962 until his overthrow in the 1970s).
Whoops — it refers to “This multidisciplinary project is led by Dr. Yohannes Haile-Selassie of The Cleveland Museum of Natural History.”
Best known roles for both, neither one was happy, but that’s Hollywood for ya. Still beats workin’ for a living.
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