AS A LONG TIME ANIMAL LOVER, I THINK TAXIDERMISTS ARE SICKOS-
steffi but not Golly

Nisaba Merrieweather <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:                                 
 Get Stuffed everyone - I mean, g'dday.
 
 I was in a local bookshop a few days ago picking up a volume I had on order, 
 and I couldn't leave with just the one book for just the agreed sum of 
 money, could I. Oh, no. So a second volume came home with me.
 
 It's a little glossy paperback, the kind of format that many bookshops like 
 to spread out around their tills, on the same basis that supermarkets have 
 chocolate near *their* tills - you'll come in for something else, and grab 
 one of these before you leave, making you spend money you never intended to 
 spend.
 
 By Chuck Inglesias (I wonder if he comes from a musical family?), the last 
 thing you notice is that the acknowledgements are on the very last page. He 
 acknowledges his wife and whildren without naming names, then acknowledges 
 by name 26 dead family pets, all of which have been lovingly stuffed not 
 just into ornaments but into practical, useful objects (the mouse corkscrew, 
 Siamese nightlight and parrot keyholder spring to mind).
 
 For the life of me, I still can't work out whether he is deadly (!) serious, 
 or whether it's an extended joke - all the taxidermy information is there as 
 in any serious manual, and the finished products undoubtedly do theyr jobs, 
 but they're hilarious! Cockroach earrings, anyone? Terrapin windchimes?
 
 And you can get your revenge on disobedient animals posthumously - vis a vis 
 the naughty dog who is always chewing the remote control can be stuffed so 
 that his mouth is *just* open enough to provide a permanent remote-holder 
 next to your favourite TV chair!
 
 There are twenty-four simple projects involving twenty-six former pets (salt 
 and pepper shakers etc come in pairs). The beauty of this book actually is 
 that it inspires you to think up projects of your own: perhaps breeding then 
 feeding ratpoison to a tankful of mice to make birthday cake candle holders? 
 Or a lizard with an open jaw as a backscratcher? Or a flat frog flyswatter? 
 (dry out the skin, then glue to a flat surface and attach to a handle). I 
 can think of heaps of things almost as bizarre as his original project 
 ideas, but I would never have developed this mental richness if I had never 
 seen the book. It's a little beaut, and one day I'll bookcross it.
 
 GET STUFFED the home taxidermist's handbook
 Chuck Inglesias
 callistemon books
 ISBN 978 1 92074 372 7
 
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