Françoise Malby-Anthony

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Françoise Malby-Anthony


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Françoise Malby-Anthony was born in the south of France, brought up in Paris, and has lived in South Africa since 1987. She founded the Thula Thula game reserve in 1998 with her late husband, the renowned conservationist and bestselling author Lawrence Anthony. When Lawrence died in 2012, Françoise took over the running of the reserve and is equally passionate about conservation. She was the driving force behind setting up a wildlife rehabilitation centre at the reserve to care for orphaned animals. Her first book, An Elephant in My Kitchen, was an international bestseller.

Average rating: 4.4 · 7,527 ratings · 857 reviews · 5 distinct worksSimilar authors
An Elephant in My Kitchen: ...

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4.39 avg rating — 6,409 ratings — published 2018 — 22 editions
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The Elephants of Thula Thula

4.45 avg rating — 1,091 ratings — published 2022 — 16 editions
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Elephant Whisperer: 3 Book Set

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4.81 avg rating — 26 ratings — published 2021
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Elephant Whisperer: 4 Book Set

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2025
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Dining with Elephants

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2025
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More books by Françoise Malby-Anthony…
An Elephant in My Kitchen: ... The Elephants of Thula Thula
(4 books)
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4.48 avg rating — 40,989 ratings

Quotes by Françoise Malby-Anthony  (?)
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“To be amongst these majestic creatures as they go calmly about their day is an extraordinary privilege and joy.”
Françoise Malby-Anthony, The Elephants of Thula Thula

“Living in the bush teaches you that life is a magnificent cycle of birth and death, and nothing showed me that more powerfully than when Nana gave birth to a beautiful baby boy around the time of Lawrence’s passing.

Of course I named him Lolo.”
Francoise Malby-Anthony, An Elephant in My Kitchen: What the Herd Taught Me about Love, Courage and Survival

“walked in a disorganized jumble to the front of the house, stayed there for a few minutes then shouldered their way to the back of the house again, never grazing, always moving. ‘They were disturbed but I had no idea why. I thought maybe they had had a run-in with poachers. When I got closer, I saw the telltale streaks of stress on the sides of their faces, even the babies’,’ Promise said afterwards, rubbing his own cheek in amazement. An elephant’s temporal gland sits between its eye and ear, and secretes liquid when the animal is stressed, which can create the mistaken impression that it is crying. The elephants at our entrance weren’t crying, but the dark moist lines running down their massive cheeks showed that something had deeply affected them. After about forty minutes, they lined up at the fence separating our home from the bush and their gentle communication started. Solemn rumbles rolled through the air, the same low-frequency language they always used with Lawrence. Mabula, the herd’s dominant bull, paced”
Francoise Malby-Anthony, An Elephant in My Kitchen

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