The famous furred

Barking mad is a phrase that might spring to mind if you should ever pursue morbid tourism to its kitschy limits and seek out the Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park. It's a very contained sort of name for a place that really is overflowing with occupants, some of them formerly famous. In a Hollywood sort of way, of course, this being movie-mad Los Angeles.
The pet cemetery is quite a way from Hollywood itself, hiding out in Calabasas, on the far northern outskirts of the city. This area, which escaped the devastation caused by the January wildfires, is one of California's most expensive suburbs. The Kourtney Kardashian lives here somewhere. So does the actor Will Smith.
Malibu is nearby. Bob Dylan's place is there. But that lot are all hidden away in their mansions and on their compounds, behind gates and at the ends of long drives and a lot less interesting than the inhabitants of the 4ha of sun-kissed slopes that are the Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park.
The park sits at the end of a lane between a light industrial zone and - from the "ponk-ponk" sounds coming over a high fence - a tennis court complex.
There could be stars, looking perfect, knocking their balls about over there, but there's more celebrity on this side of the fence. All dead, naturally, but not forgotten, if the fresh floral displays dotted across this eternal animal park are anything to go by.
Mostly, the last resting places of more than 40,000 animals here are marked by discreet lawn-level plaques, though there's nothing remotely low level about the epitaphs most of them bear. This is where the barking-mad business slips in.
Bu hikaye New Zealand Listener dergisinin March 1-7, 2025 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye New Zealand Listener dergisinin March 1-7, 2025 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap

A hint of mermaids
Erin Palmisano's latest novel once again has food and romance at the heart of its well-plotted story.

Execution over innovation
Big and bold ideas are fine, but being the best beats being first.

Something's wrong with all of them
Engaging dissection of the 20th-century novel likely to send the reader in search for the book under discussion.

Cell warfare
A NZ trial using immunotherapy to beat a form of blood cancer is expanding after promising results – and it's hoped the 'gold standard' treatment will soon be widely available.

The virus that stole all the smells
In this edited extract from The Forgotten Sense, Jonas Olofsson traces the rise in anosmia as a result of Covid-19 infections.

When caring is ‘woke'
Some years ago, I sat in a small plane circling over Punta del Este in Uruguay. There was a delay and we sat in tense silence until we began our descent. Outside the tiny airport, a taxi ferried us past private Lear jets; these had been the cause of the hold-up. The driver pointed to two planes side by side. \"This one is a Trump plane.\"

Getting along swimmingly
The presenters of Endangered Species Aotearoa spend a fair bit of time on and in the water in the second season.

That clingy feeling
Our pets display the same types of attachment behaviours as we do, or so it seems.

Gone girl
She wandered in on Thursday morning looking very wan, and climbed into her bed. I sat on the edge and stroked her back.