Trooper The bobcat who came in from the wild

F. B. Johnson

Large print - 2018

"One summer day in 1987, middle-aged desert tour guide Johnson went on his daily walk into the Mojave. Finding a small bobcat kitten, injured, orphaned, and desperately in need of help, he took it home for the night. For the next nineteen years Trooper became a part of the Johnson family and their community"--

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Subjects
Published
Thorndike, Maine : Center Point Large Print 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
F. B. Johnson (author)
Edition
Center Point Large Print edition
Item Description
Regular print version previously published by: Skyhorse Publishing.
Physical Description
351 pages (large print) ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781683248798
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1. My New Friend
  • Chapter 2. "Will He Live?"
  • Chapter 3. The Adventure Begins
  • Chapter 4. How to Domesticate a Wild Kitten
  • Chapter 5. Getting to Know You
  • Chapter 6. Games We Cats Play
  • Chapter 7. Tough Guy
  • Chapter 8. We Move
  • Chapter 9. New Territory, New Friends
  • Chapter 10. Disappearing
  • Chapter 11. The Fox and the Black Cats
  • Chapter 12. The Fox Knows
  • Chapter 13. Vanished!
  • Chapter 14. Rescue!
  • Chapter 15. The Night Visitor
  • Chapter 16. The Bodyguard
  • Chapter 17. Little Brother
  • Chapter 18. Mystery Solved
  • Chapter 19. The Legend of Fat Face
  • Chapter 20. Peace Is Shattered
  • Chapter 21. The War
  • Chapter 22. Introducing Brother to the Desert
  • Chapter 23. The Touching of Heads
  • Chapter 24. Gone
  • Postscript
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

Animal lover Johnson found a cat caught in a deadly cactus. When he brought it home, he discovered that it was a bobcat. Determined to raise the animal, anyway, Johnson and his wife gave Trooper nearly free reign to come and go, which he did. It helped that they lived in the desert and were able to move to a ranch. Trooper seemed to act like a magnet, as more stray animals found their way to the Johnsons: two black kittens, a scarred cat called Fat Face, and a peacock. All these visitors found new homes, except for one yellow cat that Trooper adopted as his protegé. Short chapters function as episodic adventures, some more dramatic than others, and Johnson does his best to create enough mystery for readers to keep turning the pages. He also introduces us to supportive vet Doctor Marg, the Johnsons' neighbor Jim, and their hired hand, Herman. This is just right for readers searching for a warm portrait of an unusual cat and the people who loved him.--Curbow, Joan Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

In 1987, the author found an orphan bobcat caught in a cactus and acted quickly to save his life. Johnson named the animal Trooper, and together, they had 19 years of adventures in the Mojave Desert. With coyotes being one notable exception, Johnson's love of animals extends to all creatures encountered by Trooper, from those native to the area (kit foxes, desert tortoises, jackrabbits) to those introduced by humans (mustangs and one unrepentant peacock). Written in an unadorned style reminiscent of the works of James Herriot, this love letter to the world's friendliest bobcat is also a tale of Las Vegas wildlife driven from their natural habitats as the desert morphs into suburbia. As Johnson comes to terms with Trooper's death, the reader may feel sadness at saying goodbye to a cat they never met but feel as if they already know and will almost surely miss. VERDICT A charming memoir about a pet bobcat, its owner, family, and friends. Readers who enjoy stories of human-animal friendships, such as Sy Montgomery's The Good Good Pig and Irene Pepperberg's Alex and Me, will find much to love here.-Mary Schons, Hammond P.L., IN © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.