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What
readers have been saying about
Elliott Light's Chain Thinking
"When
a writer attempts to introduce a social issue into his fiction,
he can almost be sure that he will be accused of some kind
of proselytizing. In Chain Thinking, the issue is animal rights,
and the fiction is the story of Kikora, a chimpanzee, and
Shep Harrington, a lawyer and detective manqué, and
his battle not only to solve a murder, but to save the chimp
from experimentation. Elliott Light has managed to weave these
two parts together, and do it seamlessly."
--MARTHA GRIMES, BEST-SELLING WRITER OF MORE THAN
20 MYSTERIES, NOTED ANIMAL RIGHTS ADVOCATE, AND WINNER OF
THE NERO WOLFE AWARD (BEST MYSTERY)
" Those who think that stories about legal rights for
nonhuman animals have to be boring, tedious, complicated,
or abstract are in for a treat. In Chain Thinking, the plain
truths about our inhumanity to other beings with whom we share
our world are told in a way both exciting and funny. What
animal rights lawyer wouldn't want to be like Shep Harrington
(except for the part about going to jail)? And I guessed wrong
about whodunnit!
-- STEVEN M. WISE, LECTURER, HARVARD LAW SCHOOL, AND
AUTHOR OF THE BOOKS RATTLING THE CAGE: TOWARD LEGAL RIGHTS
FOR ANIMALS AND DRAWING THE LINE: THE CASE FOR ANIMAL RIGHTS
Entertaining and enlightening.
-- BOOKLIST (THE MAGAZINE OF THE AMERICAN LIBRARY
ASSOCIATION)
" Chain Thinking's story, which I enjoyed, unfolds at
a quick pace and raises a number of issues related to vivisection,
such as the chain-of-being philosophy, the inapplicability
of animal test results to humans, and alternative test methods.
Author Elliott Light also introduces the reader to current
legal theories which the main character develops to assert
the legal rights of chimpanzees. I hope PETA members will
order the book from our website store and pass it along to
their mainstream fellows. Chain Thinking's success in the
marketplace could mean that many people not necessarily in
tune with the issue of animal use in laboratory testing will
develop a more thoughtful attitude about the whole sordid
mess -- animal incarceration, suffering, and death for second-class
science at best."
-- LORI KETTLER, ATTORNEY, PEOPLE FOR THE ETHICAL TREATMENT
OF ANIMALS (PETA)
Within this mystery, Elliott Light's reluctant but interesting
detective, Shep Harrington, makes his own case for the need
to break ‘Chain Thinking' and morally look at an important
topic for discussion -- the way we treat our fellow creatures.
-- NEVADA BARR, BEST-SELLING MYSTERY WRITER, AND ONE
OF THE MOST ACCLAIMED MYSTERY WRITERS OF OUR TIME ( WASHINGTON
POST)
Chain Thinking is two books in one. On the one hand, it's
a wonderful introduction to the plight of captive chimpanzees.
On the other hand, it's an engrossing murder mystery that's
hard to put down. Both elements are packed into a quick and
thoroughly enjoyable read.
-- ROGER FOUTS, CO-AUTHOR OF NEXT OF KIN, MY CONVERSATIONS
WITH CHIMPAZEES, AND DEBORAH FOUTS, DIRECTOR, CHIMPANZEE AND
HUMAN COMMUNICATION INSTITUTE, CENTRAL WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY,
ELLENSBURG, WA
Elliott Light's Chain Thinking is refreshing in the way
it offers up a fast moving crime plot wrapped around the fundamental
issue of animal rights. Although not all animal rights activists
will appreciate the lead characters' penchant for most things
meat, it's an exciting read and a great gift idea for those
whose minds are not so open on animal rights and the use of
animals in scientific experimentation.
-- ANGIE STEPHENSON, VICE PRESIDENT OF ANIMAL LIBERATION,
NEW SOUTH WALES (AUSTRALIA)
Watching the murder storyline play out to its climax made
for great reading… But it was the story's second aspect
that intrigued me even more. The story contains plenty of
details on the behavior of chimpanzees and the battle being
waged as labs worldwide continue animal testing. You see this
from two angles. The first is from the chimps' eyes. They
are locked in cages, subjected to test after test, injected
with deadly diseases, and rarely experience love. The facts
presented tug at your emotions. However, on the other hand,
if the work done on chimps could save the life of your child,
how can you really make that choice? The author poses these
two questions through his colorful characters, including the
headstrong Shep Harrington, making Chain Thinking a book that
I will be
pondering for the weeks to come.
-- TRACY FARNSWORTH, ROUNDTABLE REVIEWS
In Chain Thinking, a follow-on mystery to the meaty and
fascinating Lonesome Song, Elliott Light proves that he is
not a one-book wonder, and indeed has improved with age. The
topical, ripped-from-the-headlines theme of whether humans
should exploit our closest biological relatives - chimpanzees
- for biomedical research raises immense ethical questions
without the usual politically correct claptrap. Regardless
of how you feel about the issue, this is a thoughtful and
well-written read.
-- LEWIS PERDUE, AUTHOR OF THE ACCLAIMED MYSTERY-THRILLER
DAUGHTER OF GOD
" The more Shep Harrington (small town lawyer-turned-detective)
meddles in the affairs of a self-interested biotech CEO and
a murdered star scientist, the more intriguing things become.
At stake are life sentences for an accused animal rights activist
and a group of laboratory primates that are supporting what
might be considered less than essential medical research.
Chain Thinking is both an entertaining read and an invitation
to seriously consider how we conduct our affairs with our
closest genetic relatives."
-- ROBERT A. HOLT, PHD, HEAD OF SEQUENCING, CANADA'S
MICHAEL SMITH GENOME SCIENCE CENTRE, BC CANCER AGENCY
In Chain Thinking, Shep Harrington, the lawyer turned amateur
sleuth, struggles to find out the truth behind an impenetrable
cover-up, and of the animal rights crusader set up to take
the blame for the much ballyhooed murder of a prominent pharmaceutical
researcher. And while his story greatly entertains us, Chain
Thinking also lays out – in simple, understandable terms
-- the legal and ethical issues surrounding human exploitation
of our next of kin -- chimpanzees. You don't have to be an
animal rights advocate to enjoy this engrossing mystery. But
after you turn the final page, you'll definitely have something
important to think and talk about.
-- MARY LEE JENSVOLD, PH.D., CHIMPANZEE & HUMAN
COMMUNICATION INSTITUTE (CHCI), CENTRAL WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
" Chain Thinking is a superior read! Setting a fascinating,
under-examined moral and political issue within the context
of a gripping mystery, it gives you much more to consider
than whodunnit? In the tradition of Lonesome Song, Shep Harrington
has returned in a real page turner!
-- ANDREW LIGHT, MANAGER, CUSTOMER SERVICE AND TRAINING,
SYNCRA SYSTEMS, INC.
Without being preachy, the position of the animal-rights
activists is made abundantly clear, in a very persuasive manner.
While some of this is done in a quasi-lecture form, we nonetheless
never feel we're being ‘lectured at.' Both sides of
the issue are presented, in a fair and balanced manner. [I
guess it's ok to use that phrase now, right?] The chimp Kikora,
Shep Harrington discovers, has qualities usually thought of
as being in the exclusive domain of humans, e.g., the ability
to empathize, as well as communicate via ASL, experience pain
and anxiety, etc. The characters in this novel are ones we
quickly learn to care about, none more so than Kikora herself.
The book was well-written, and the story an engrossing one.
This is the second in Mr. Light's SmallTown Mystery series,
the first being Lonesome Song, and I will certainly look for
the earlier book, and look forward to the next in the series.
-- GLORIA FEIT, 4MYSTERYADDICTS
I just finished Chain Thinking today. I am not a purely
objective observer when it comes to the issue of using chimpanzees
for biomedical testing. Even so, I was caught up in the story.
The Dr. Doring character made my skin crawl. And I kept wishing
that Shep and Heather would get together -- maybe in a sequel.
But as one who is dedicated to the cause of captive chimps,
I want to thank author Elliott Light so very much for writing
this novel. He is an answer to my prayers; I have always felt
that a good novel dealing with the subject of primate experimentation
is necessary to bring this issue to the general public. Let's
hope that millions read Chain Thinking.
-- LYNN PAULEY, FOUNDER, PRIMATE FREEDOM PROJECT
This second of Elliott Light's Small town Mysteries was
even better than the first, and I thoroughly enjoyed the debut.
The legal issues posed by Shep Harrington and chimp Kikora
in Chain Thinking caused me to think hard and long about our
legal system -- how it deals with the truth, and what the
basis of that truth may be.
-- JON L. ROBERTS, J.D., PH.D.
Chain Thinking is a great read! Light not only weaves an
entertaining yarn, but teaches us something along the way
about us, our next of kin, and how we might do better to expand
our thinking beyond the immediate protection and benefit of
our own species. Light clearly did his research on the current
status of chimpanzees in the biomedical and legal worlds,
and it shows. Bravo!
-- LIZ CLANCY LYONS, DORIS DAY ANIMAL LEAGUE
" In Chain Thinking, a great and lovable novel, Shep
Harrington demonstrates the ability of one solitary person
to make a difference, in his case by effecting change in the
lives of animals. For those of us involved daily in saving
animals in the real world, Chain Thinking serves as a wonderful
affirmation. Those not yet involved in that essential enterprise,
I hope, will see it as an engaging open door."
-- TAMMY SNEATH GRIMES, FOUNDER, DOGS DESERVE BETTER: NO CHAINS!
Elliott Light writes with an elegance that most of us can
only manage by quoting others. Luckily, I'm a lot funnier
than he is, or I'd have to give up this whole mystery novel
thing and take up upholstery. I hadn't read his previous Shep
Harrington novel, but now I'll have to go back and start from
the beginning. Elliott, you've gained a fan.
-- JEFFREY COHEN, AUTHOR OF FOR WHOM THE MINIVAN ROLLS:
AN AARON TUCKER MYSTERY , AND A FAREWELL TO LEGS: ANOTHER
AARON TUCKER MYSTERY
Shep Harrington, the lawyer hero of Elliott Light's first
book, Lonesome Song, is conned into solving the murder of
an unlikeable scientist in order to save an animal rights
person from jail or worse. He holds no brief for either the
victim or the accused. Yet, because he is a man of conscience
and an ex-jail bird with a cynical regard for prosecutors,
he insists on finding out what really happened and why. In
his search for the truth, he plows ahead with indomitable
persistence, savvy, and a little bit of luck and help from
a signing chimpanzee. Light is a clever writer who has a droll
sense of humor, considerable knowledge and insight into the
social scene, and an uncanny ability to deal with the nuances
and motivations of individuals from different walks of life.
This book is, indeed, a worthy successor to his first book,
and I suspect we will be reading about Shep Harrington for
a long time to come. Incidentally, animal rights people will
love this book.
-- ED DAGER, PROFESSOR EMERITUS (SOCIOLOGY), UNIVERSITY
OF MARYLAND
Chain Thinking is a worthy successor to the first Shep Harrington
SmallTown Mystery, Lonesome Song. The book has everything
a series reader could want: a fascinating, plot driven whodunit;
a familiar small town setting with a familiar cast of local
characters; and a host of new characters. The book strikes
a perfect balance between Shep's quest to find a murderer
and the book's central theme--the plight of a chimpanzee named
Kikora who faces certain death as a biomedical test subject.
If Chain Thinking is any indication of where this series is
headed, I can't wait for the next one and the next one and.........
-- KATY CASELLI
If you like murder mysteries, you'll love Chain Thinking.
Drawing on current scientific knowledge about the minds of
chimpanzees, the novel weaves a compelling story about murder,
power, and the mistreatment of our closest genetic relative.
I quickly found myself rooting for an ex-con, an accused murderer,
and a chimpanzee named Kikora. But more than just an entertaining
story, the reality depicted in Chain Thinking is both compelling
and disturbing. Like Uncle Tom's Cabin, Chain Thinking is
fiction that shocks the conscience. It is nothing less than
a must read.
-- RICK BOGLE, FOUNDER, PRIMATE FREEDOM PROJECT
As an admirer of Elliott Light's first novel, Lonesome Song,
I looked forward to reading Shep Harrington's next adventure,
Chain Thinking. I expected it to be good, and I was not disappointed.
Beyond the quick pace and neatly wrapped-up ending, both of
which I'd anticipated, I also had an unexpected and delightful
experience -- I learned something. The treatment of primates
in captivity that is one of the book's central issues compelled
me to wrestle with moral questions I hadn't previously considered.
This is entertainment and then some!
-- ARLEN WILSON, COUNSELOR, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
(RET)
" Imagine opening your front door to an unusual woman
who knows you're a lawyer and demands help. With some persuasion,
you agree and find yourself charged with the care of a baby
chimpanzee, obviously stolen. So begins Chain Thinking, the
second Shep Harrington SmallTown mystery. When Shep eventually
learns that the scientist who cared for Kikora the chimp has
been murdered, Shep find himself in the middle of not only
this murder mystery but a battle to save Kikora as well. When
books have an agenda, there's usually a point in the story
where the agenda takes over and the story becomes secondary.
Fortunately, this is not the case with Chain Thinking. The
animal rights aspect blends effortlessly with the story. It
is as an important aspect of this novel, but not the whole.
The murder mystery is front and center and Light delivers
the mysterious goods!"
-- ELIZABETH BALDWIN, BUYER, MYSTERIOUS GALAXY BOOKS
(SAN DIEGO, CA)
First-novel authors have no rep to ride on. But Light's
second Shep Harrington mystery, Chain Thinking, already has
the jacket approval of bestselling author Martha Grimes.
-- BILL RUEHLMANN, BOOK COLUMNIST, THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT |