Anne Coombs' final book ' Our Familiars: The meaning of animals in our lives'.

The launch of Our Familiars on the 23rd of August 2024 at Gleebooks was a wonderful event. Almost eighty people in the room and a very warm and receptive audience. The speaker - Lynda Stoner - actress and now the CEO of Animal Liberation - delivered an address that was warm, thoughtful and hugely supportive of the book. See her address below


Our Familiars: The meaning of animals in our lives.

May 2024 Upswell


The Book: How do animals guard, serve, and care for us? And how and why do we love them so much? Anne Coombs spent a lifetime working to understand the profound answers that come from these two deceptively simple questions. Before her death in late 2021 she researched the topic extensively and reflected deeply on her own experiences with animals, both domestic and in the paddocks. The animals in her life were privy to her deepest and darkest emotions: her despair, her tears and her love.

 

Opening with the story of Anne’s childhood familiar, Elsie the goat—and introducing Lena the donkey, her beloved dogs, Charlie the cat, the cows on the farm, and Vincent the horse—this tender book takes us on an expansive journey that is part personal memoir, part insightful research, and part noble call to action. In Our Familiars Anne has left us with a beautiful meditation on the awe-inspiring responsibility we take on with other living creatures: from their containment and loss of freedom, to our intense and mysteriously mutual love. With wit, humour, and insight, she asks us to feel wonder as we watch how our animal companions live, and to empathise deeply with Our Familiars.

Anne Coombs | Our Familiars

How do we become more attuned to the animals in our lives and challenge ourselves to recognise that their lives are as meaningful as our own? This is the project begun by Anne Coombs at the start of Our Familiars and completed by her death in late 2021. Coombs was surrounded by animals from childhood—as pets and working animals on farms and properties. Some special animals are introduced throughout the book as Coombs seeks deeper understanding: a donkey called Lina; a horse named Vincent; dogs, cats, cows; and Elsie, her childhood goat. Our Familiars is approachable and accessible but subtly revelatory: an invitation for readers to open their minds to the beings with whom we share this earth and to consider the expectations we put upon them.

As she re-examines her relationship with each, she reads broadly across animal behavioural studies, science, philosophy, ethics, and more. She wrestles with thinkers across the spectrum, from radicalised vegans to those who view animals only in relation to their usefulness to humans. The narrative tracks several years, inviting us into the various intimacies (and also misconnections and puzzles) between Coombs and her animal familiars. Coombs’s conclusions are not extreme, nor even overly rigorous; much is observed, felt, and meditated upon. While reading, I attempted new ways of communicating with my rescue greyhound, Mallory, and was open to thinking more deeply about her.

Though less academic than Abandon Every Hope by Hayley Singer, Our Familiars would be a good complement to that title, and is also recommended for readers of Maggie Mackellar.

Books+Publishing reviewer: Angela Meyer is an author and lecturer in writing and publishing at RMIT. She is a former publisher and bookseller. Books+Publishing is Australia’s number-one source of pre-publication book reviews.


Anne Coombs | Our Familiars

Anne in the early days at Keil-na-nain.


Anne Coombs | Our Familiars

Anne and Vincent. A long relationship.

Anne Coombs | Our Familiars

Lina the Donkey, our most intelligent and endearing of our farm animals.

Anne Coombs | Our Familiars

Anne and Suki.

This is Linda Stoners address for Our Familiars at the book launch 23rd of August 2024 at Gleebooks, Sydney

I acknowledge we are meeting tonight on the land of the Gadigal People, I pay my respects to their Elders past and present, as well as

to emerging leaders. I also thank the Traditional Custodians for caring for Country for thousands of generations. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander sovereignty was never ceded, this continent always was and always will be Aboriginal land.


My thanks too to Terri-ann for the honour of asking me here tonight. “Our Familiars” is one of the most exquisite books I have ever read.

And heaven knows I have over my lifetime read literally thousands of books. Anne takes us on her personal journey interacting with other

species with words and images so beautiful they catch in your throat. As a half a century vegan/animal rights activist who believes our

planet can no longer sustain animal agribusiness and the plight of millions of people around the world whose land is being eroded for

animal agribusiness; when a plant based diet would feed the entire world and help repair the planet - there are passages within the book

that didn’t resonate with me but I know Anne grappled for most of her life, particularly the latter part, with these issues.

Through this book Anne speaks with wisdom and to each of us who see without really seeing, who to some extent take our environment

for granted until we are forced through whatever circumstances to identify each component of our surroundings and then really SEE a

leaf, the trunk of a tree, into the eyes of your most loved companion be it human or non-human.

Non-human animals still do not have “sentience” afforded to them by politicians in Australia, despite the glaringly obvious.

They are denied this because if we DO acknowledge this: their capacity for empathy, pleasure, love, memory, grief, mischief and

other more dreadful emotions caused by humans - defeat, unspeakable pain, zoonosis, abject misery - we would have to rethink our treatment of them in animal agribusiness, laboratories and indeed all areas where animals are exploited for profit.

From Darwin, Aristotle, (the awful Rene Descartes), Jeffrey Masson, Peter Singer, Shakespeare, Tom Regan, C.L Lewis, Marc Bekoff,

Jeremy Bentham, Rudyard Kipling. From the 13 th to the 18 th century, animals in Europe being tried in courtrooms: Be it literature, history,

anthropology, ethology, zoology, science or philosophy, Anne was a voracious reader who generously shares lived and read-about miracles

between humans and other animals. I am grateful for so much in Anne’s book - not the least her giving righteous credence to being able to share telepathically with our Familiars. Something I have often experienced, but similarly with the concept of sentience, many still won’t or can’t acknowledge this powerful connection. Anne reminded me of the death of the Elephant Whisperer Lawrence Anthony. Lawrence had worked to ensure the safety of a herd of elephants and through his words and body language and yes, telepathy, he encouraged this threatened herd to stay on his vast property as just beyond the boundaries hunters were waiting to slaughter them. It worked and they lived well and roamed freely on his land and he might not see them for very long periods of time. When Lawrence died suddenly of a heart attack, the entire herd reappeared and silently walked all the way to his home where his wife was grieving, they stayed for a couple of days before returning to where they had come from. The sheer audaciousness of the human animal needing to believe in our superiority to other species, Anne repeatedly and effectively calls into question. Her humour throughout is delightful and as she compares the sound of Lina the donkey emitting her foghorn build ups with that of a woman climaxing had me wondering what I have been missing out on all this time and certainly looking with awe at Susan.

Whether through Susan, Elsie, Vincent, Charlie, Sammie or Lina this lovely book is peppered with love, awe, bemusement and a hunger for

deeper communication with the Familiars. By way of example of Shakespeare’s “there are move things in Heaven and Earth Horatio” - Anne recounts Petra Stapp, an English researcher who spoke about a woman walking the moors of England. The woman was tiring and sat while her boyfriend walked on. Soon after a single sheep appeared at the top of the hill, she or he walked deliberately to the woman, leant forward and kissed her on the lips. Astonished the woman sat still, she and the sheep observed each other, face to face for a few moments. Then the sheep turned and retraced their steps. The woman’s boyfriend observed all this from a distance. Back at the car the woman turned her mobile on to read a message that came through the same time she had her interaction with the sheep, the message read that a close friend of hers had just died.”

Anne’s writing is so evocative I was deeply mentally there for each of their beautiful properties culminating in Little Farm and the nightmare

of The Black Summer and Little Farm and its inhabitant’s survival. Anne’s writing about losing her beloved Lina just did me in as did the

wonder of reading that she and Susan called in a herbalist to help Dexter and the findings from one of his hair samples that the core root

of his ailments stemmed from grief. My vision was completely blurred. To learn more about this eclectic menagerie you will have to buy the book. So deeply immersed as I was in this book whenever the phone rang I jumped shocked back into my world. When following Anne’s

medical procedures, I swore out loud. I was unable to put this glorious book down. I could not speak after finishing it. I didn’t want to engage with anything outside of letting Anne’s book sit inside of me.

As Susan so beautifully wrote in the afterword: The cast of animals and two humans. Two extraordinary women who inspire, uplift, teach

and affirm the bond we have with each other and Our Familiars. I hope you buy this book, I cannot recommend it highly enough.

Lynda Stoner - actress and now the CEO of Animal Liberation


Anne Coombs | Our Familiars
Anne Coombs | Our Familiars
Linda Stoner | Our Familiars

Early readers reactions:

Maree Tynan

"I just finished Anne's book last night. It was marvellous, I was fascinated by the depth of her observations and research. Even being prepared for the ending to be necessarily confronting, combined with your Afterword it was heartbreaking. Many many thanks for ensuring this important story has been published and is being shared."


Inez Baranay, author

"I read Our Familiars yesterday with appreciation and enjoyment for its voice, concerns, frankness, vividness. Glad to find a book that speaks both to the reader with a long time interest in animal life and a long-time vegetarian, and to other readers who might be stimulated to consider these things as never before".

Jordanne Stewart 

"OMG! This book is so amazing! Beautifully put together, honest and engaging from the first sentence. Couldn't put it down last night. Fills my heart with love, and gratitude on so many levels. Enormously talented, thoughtful, practical and deeply emotional women, you and Annie."


Mark Wakely, author and poet

"I am much further into Our Familiars. I enjoy reading it slowly as I hear Coombs' voice so strongly... I also hear her sharp intelligence — this is smart stuff!

... there is quite a meditative feel to the book... Coombs' has so closely and quietly watched the behaviour of her animals over such a long period of time and found wisdom through doing so; a prolonged act of mediation in itself. I think it is a much more important book on several levels than I anticipated." 


Joanne Burns, poet

" I am enjoying Anne's book... interesting, pleasurable to read - and illuminating.."

©Anne Coombs 2024

contact: info@susanvargawriter.com

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