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Overview
The alligator—Florida's most feared, maligned animal. From the time European settlers first stepped onto Florida's soil, the alligator has been a target of dread and revulsion—and the hunter's gun. Collected here are true(and tongue—in—cheek) accounts of alligators and the people who have hunted them, been attacked by them ,and tried to save them from extinction. Journey through the Everglades with 1800's Seminoles, experts at stalking and killing gators. Go along with a "Northern girl" as she shoots "my first alligator in my gloves and veil." And learn how modern alligator hunters go about their business, which hasn't changed much in the last hundred years or so.If you like tall tales, you'll love Henry, the alligator—turned—head—waiter who becomes despondent when a pretty New York girl spurns his lovesick advances. Or Algy, the gator who survives a broiling in a furnace by his owners, who happen to think he's already dead and won't mind the heat. Or Two—Toed Tom, who may or may not have even exited, but who was blamed for everything from eating mules to terrorizing women and children.
This book is filled with amusing black—and—white photographs and is punctuated by a full—color section of photographs by John Moran, who has managed to capture the true essence of alligators in their natural habitat.
Author Biography: Kevin M. McCarthy is a professor of English at the University of Florida in Gainesville. He has written or edited several books on a variety of subjects having to do with Florida.
Synopsis
A collection of true stories that tell about alligators and the people who have hunted them, been attacked by them, and tried to save them from extinction.
Florida Living Magazine
McCarthy has compiled a humorous, fascinating and varied book that is a thoroughly enjoyable read for Floridians who see alligators in their yards and nearby ponds almost daily, as well as the tourist fascinated by these misunderstoodan often malignedcreatures.