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Smoke the Donkey

A Marine's Unlikely Friend

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
On a U.S. military base near Fallujah in war-torn Iraq, Col. John Folsom woke up one morning to the sound of a small, scruffy donkey tied up outside his quarters. He was charmed by this scrawny animal with a plaintive expression. Folsom and his fellow Marines took in the donkey, built him a corral and shelter, and escorted him on daily walks. One night, hanging out with the Marines as they relaxed after work, the donkey snatched someone's lit cigarette and gobbled it up, to the laughter of all. Suddenly, the donkey had a name: Smoke. More than a conversation topic for troops connecting with families back home, Smoke served as mascot, ambassador, and battle buddy.

Smoke the Donkey recounts the strong friendship between Colonel Folsom and this stray donkey and the massive challenges of reuniting Smoke with Folsom in the United States following Folsom's retirement. After being given to a local sheik, Smoke wandered the desert before Folsom rallied an international team to take him on a convoluted journey to his new home. The team won a protracted bureaucratic battle to move Smoke from Iraq to Turkey, only to face a tougher fight getting him out of Turkey. Once in the States, Smoke became a beloved therapy animal for both children and veterans. Smoke's story, while tinged with sadness, speaks to the enduring bond between a man and an animal, unbroken by war, distance, or red tape.
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2016
      The story of a Marine and the local donkey he adopted as a mascot for his troops. Omaha World Herald editor Cate Folsom, Col. John Folsom's wife, makes good use of her unique perspective. She begins with her husband's arrival at a base near Fallujah, where he was in command of a logistics base. After a casual remark inspired by seeing a funny video of Marines chasing a donkey on another base, he woke one morning to discover that his troops had captured a donkey for him. Deciding it would be good for morale, he began to feed and care for the animal, dubbed "Smoke" after eating a lit cigarette. The donkey soon became a celebrity, greeting visiting dignitaries. Eventually, Smoke had a large international fandom and his own Facebook page. Folsom's successor at the camp agreed to look after the donkey, but back home, Folsom had second thoughts. He contacted Terri Crisp of SPCA International, who had experience returning military service dogs to the United States. Thus began a complicated and often frustrating campaign to get Smoke home, a campaign that takes up much of the book. Finally, Folsom got the animal to Nebraska, where Smoke helped servicemen and women recovering from PTSD. The author's closeness to the main source and her journalistic skills go a long way in bringing the story to life, with quotes from emails between the various parties. Readers learn about the importance of logistics to a war effort, which military books often downplay. The middle chapters go on--in too much detail--about the Byzantine negotiations required to bring a donkey from abroad into the U.S. It might have been more entertaining to hear more about Smoke's high jinks and relationships with regular Marines and combat veterans than about the bureaucratic hoops everyone had to jump through to get him to Nebraska. A good read for Marines and their families as well as animal lovers.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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