who is the writer of the story lion Whisperer
Answers
Answer:
Kevin is the writer of the story lion whisperer.
Explanation:
Explanation:
Kevin Richardson’s unique relationships with these large predators have opened many doors and captivated the imagination of many people throughout the world. He has presented and produced several documentaries that detail his relationships with the animals and highlight the plight of lions both in captivity and in the wild.
Meet Kevin | Kevin’s Background | Past Work: Documentaries | Feature Films | Books
PART OF THE PRIDE BOOK
A film started to circulate on YouTube® of a remarkable man named Kevin Richardson, an animal custodian in a South African animal park. The film showed Richardson in his day-to-day work, looking after some of the world’s most dangerous animals. Staring some directly in the eye, crouching down at their level, playing with them and even kissing them on the nose – all without ever being seriously attacked or injured.
The films popularity sky-rocketed and Richardson became an international sensation. In “Part of the Pride”, Kevin Richardson tells the story of his life and work, how he grew from a young boy who cared for so many animals that he was called “The Bird Man of Orange Grove” to an adolescent who ran wild and, finally, to a man who is able to cross the divide between humans and predators. As a self-taught animal behaviorist, Richardson has broken every safety rule known to humans when working with these wild animals. Flouting common misconceptions that breaking an animal’s spirit with sticks and chains is the best way to subdue them, he uses love, understanding and trust to develop personal bonds with them. His unique method of getting to know their individual personalities, what makes each of them angry, happy, upset, or irritated-just like a mother understands a child-has caused them to accept him like one of their own into their fold. Like anyone else who truly loves animals, Richardson allows their own stories to share center stage as he tells readers about Napoleon and Tau, the two male lions he calls his “brothers”; the amazing Meg, a lioness Richardson swims with; the fierce Tsavo who savagely attacked him; and the heartbreaking little Hyena called Homer who didn’t live to see his first birthday.
Richardson also chronicles his work on the feature film “white lion” and has a lot to say about the state of lion farming and about the state of lion farming and hunting in South Africa today. In “Part of the Pride”, Richardson, with novelist Tony Park, delves into the minds of the big cats and their world to show readers a different way of understanding the dangerous big cats of Africa.