When Hippo Was Hairy is just one of the thirty-six fascinating stories about African animals in this imaginative book. The folklore and mythology of the African people have been handed down by word of mouth through generations of tribal life. In a land which, until very recently, teemed with the richest wildlife in the world, people and animals lived for centuries in close proximity to one another, and came to know and understand each other intimately. African folk tales reflect this special relationship. Nick Greaves, who lives in Zimbabwe, has studied the traditional animal stories of different tribes from many parts of the continent. In this book he records some of the best. There are tales about Lion, Cheetah, Hyena, Elephant, and many others. Some are humorous, some sad, but all make compelling reading. Not only do they preserve for all time Africa's animal folklore, they also provide a fascinating, vivid, exciting picture of a land and its people. Each animal has been painted in brilliant detail and colourful, realistic style by Rod Clement, and nearly every story is illustrated by his lively sketches. After the stories about each animal, there is factual information about the animal's habits, lifespan, size, gestation period and other useful and interesting details. This is complemented by a map of Africa showing where the animal still lives today. This is a unique book of stories, paintings and facts about one of the world's great heritages - the wildlife of Africa - presented in a way that will entertain all ages and tastes and, hopefully, help to preserve that heritage too.
This was one of the collections of folktales from around the world that I read and re-read as a kid. One fun feature (especially for a young proto-biologist) is that there are beautiful color plates of the animals and a little page on the natural history of each.
The tales of how various animal features came to be are of course timeless - though, like many traditional folktales, they can get a bit darker than American children's media. For instance, while mental image of a hippo with a long, luxuriant fur is funny, the story of how he lost that fur is kinda traumatic! Some stories are strikingly similar to those told in other cultures. There's a variant on "the tortoise and the hare", for instance - communication with the Mediterranean through Egypt may have spread that one around to all places that have both types of animals! Others are very much based in local ecological interactions, like the rather sweet story of why giraffe and the oxpecker birds are friends.
In terms of how the stories are presented...it's a mixed bag. On the one hand, I think it's neat that the white writer describes them as "told by" himself and there is a cultural group label on each story - which, in combination, make it clear that he didn't invent them and isn't taking credit. However, some of the wording in the introduction is not ideal. "The interior of Africa was a place of mystery to all but a handful of adventurous (and often foolhardy) explorers, hunters, and missionaries..." Yeah, except to the people who actually LIVED THERE, as these stories make clear! Similarly, it kind (accidentally?) reinforces the "Africa is all one thing" idea by noting how similar a lot of the stories are, and then mentioning that this might be due to the Bantu expansion. If that's the argument, it might have been nice to have a map of where the stories come from. The book doesn't include any stories about Anansi the spider - some of the most famous African folktales from a New World perspective. That, along with animal species included, does suggest that the stories were all collected from East Africa down to South Africa (which is indeed mostly Bantu cultures), but not West Africa. Here the trickster is either hare or jackal!
Folklore told in earnest from Eastern and Southern Africa, accompanied by a fact page for each animal. Appreciated that each story had a note from which tribe/ethnic group it originated from. This book introduced me to several new animals of the bush when I first read it a long time ago. Already interested in documentaries of the region's nature, this gave the animals more character as you learn about their habits. If anyone has watched Tinga Tinga, the stories and charm are much alike!
This is a great book to read, it has lots of traditional stories explaining how, for example, the Zebra got its stripes and I think in either this book or another one it explains how the elephant got a long trunk.
If you're interested in African fairytales and traditional stories, then this is for you. :)
This collection is a family favorite, on my mother's side - my grandfather was a "bush pilot" for a rural hospital in South Africa, and I was read these stories alongside Brer Rabbit as a little boy.