Book Descriptions
for The Good Lion by Beryl Markham and Don Brown
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
A story adapted from aviator Beryl Markham’s autobiography, West with the Night , relates a breathtaking incident from her childhood in Africa when she was attacked by a lion. The fully grown male lion named Paddy lives on a neighbor’s land on the edge of the Kikuyu Reserve near Nairobi. He is tame, but young Beryl is always careful around him. One day, she comes upon him by surprise and he follows her. “There was no sound or wind. Even the lion made no sound as he came up swiftly behind me . . . He roared, an immense roar that dissolved me in it.” Beryl is saved by a man who saw the lion stalking her. The lion is captured and lives out the rest of his days in a cage. “He was a good lion, and he had done what he could about being a tame lion. Who thinks it is fair to be judged by a single mistake? I do not begrudge him his moment.” The drama of Markham’s riveting narrative is heightened by Don Brown’s superb watercolor illustrations. (Ages 6–9)
CCBC Choices 2006 . © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2006. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Based on a true story. Young Beryl and a "tame" lion called Paddy come together in an encounter that challenges notions of wild and docile, trust and duplicity, punishment and forgiveness. Full color.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.