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Scientifically, though, things don't go so well. Arguments rage as to whether or not Zan is truly learning language and the experiment comes to an end. What then for the chimpanzee who was told to be human? And what then for the young boy being asked to give up a brother?
''Half Brother'' is set in the 1970s and based on real research. Nim Chimpsky - you might not like the idea of such experiments, but you have to admit that's a funny pun - was raised in a human household, taught ASL, and eventually pronounced as having failed to learn language, just like Zan. I wouldn't consider myself as a militant about animal rights, or even particularly sentimental about animals, but I found this book incredibly difficult to read. Oppel makes it clear from the outset that the experiment isn't going to end well and I felt an ever-increasing sense of dread and pity as I read. Heartbreakingly, the flaws are clear to Ben - the not-particularly-academic, hormonal teenager - but not to his brilliant parents. Ben can see the contradictions and the cruelty as Zan is treated as a human one moment and an animal the next. His father sees only a test subject. His mother probably sees more, but indulges in handwringing self-justifications instead of facing up to things. They both spend most of the book utterly failing as parents, both for boy and chimp.
Because they are so close to humans, primates are endlessly fascinating to us. In many ways, such experiments are gross, tasteless, disrespectful distortions and abuses of another species. But despite ourselves, we want them to succeed. A chimp that could really talk? Wouldn't that be something? We say these things but if we are honest, there's a conscience on our shoulders that we should listen to.

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