What a great book! If you are interested in environmentalism, conservation, nature, wild places, NGO's, or even the broader topic of public engagement, this book is a must-read. I read it as part of a university anthropology course on political ecology, and it is easily the most enjoyable assigned reading of my schooling. Yes, there are some sections that will likely be a bit theoretical for the casual reader, but they are accessible--or you can simply skip over them.
Paige West is an anthropologist researcher and this book tells of her time in the New Guinea highlands with a people referred to as the Gimi. She chronicles a "conservation-as-development" program that was implemented in the region by some conservation NGO's and the Gimi people. It tells the story of differences in ways of seeing the world, differences in culture and understanding, and differences in understanding what the real objectives are. As West states towards the end of the book, these ideas between the two groups are "mutually exclusive". A thought provoking a analysis full of well-written prose.