"A moving, inspiring, personal look at the vastly changing world of wildlife on planet Earth.
"In Wild Things, Wild Places, Jane Alexander writes with a clear eye and a knowing, keen grasp of the issues and what is being done in conservation and the worlds of science to help the planet's most endangered species to stay alive and to thrive.
"The book begins in Belize City in the early 1980s, in a rough-and-tumble town split in two by a rancid body of water into which everything was thrown -- carcasses, shoes, dead dogs -- and with mosquitoes rife with malaria. Alexander was there researching a screenplay she was writing about a female field biologist tracking Jaguars. Instead, Alexander came across a real-life male scientist--a field biologist, zoologist, and conservationist--in Belize tracking Jaguars. His name: Alan Rabinowitz, known as the Tiger Man, a stutterer as a child who stopped talking except to his pet turtle and chameleons and who promised the animals that if he ever got his voice back, he would become their voice.
"Alexander describes how Rabinowitz took her to his study site, deep in the jungle of Belize, in Cockscomb Basin; how, once there, she was in a state of wonder at seeing a Laughing Falcon perched above the porch and insect species the size of hummingbirds flying about. And she writes of how her life was changed forever as Rabinowitz opened up to her a world of wild things, wild places as they followed the tracks of the great cats through rainforests, hoping to glimpse the rare Clouded Leopard in Thailand, Tigers camouflaged by the grasses of India, and Jaguars lazing on the riverbanks of Brazil's searing Pantanal, the Serengeti of South America.
"We see Alexander becoming aware, through Rabinowitz, that the future for wildlife had become a kind of war and that the fight forward would be hard. And we see how Rabinowitz's efforts to save endangered animals from disappearing from Earth became Alexander's mission as well.
"She writes of the work being done by other scientists with whom she traveled, in search of a way to save large sections of wilderness for all types of wildlife. And she writes of her hopes for the future of the planet, of seeing the birth of environmental organizations representing millions of active citizens educating others and demanding change in legislation.
"And throughout it all--Alexander's account of her own personal journey from the little girl on the beaches of New England who wanted to fly to the grown woman today doing what she can to make it possible for all species (including our own) to continue to flourish."
~~ front & back flaps
The writing isn't brilliant, neither are the photographs. But the author has been to every country with extinction problems, and has done that in the company of people in the forefront of the fight. It's an amazing journey -- very inspiring! I finished the book with the conviction that I should find some way to join the fight... at some level, in some way. The book was written in 2016, and honestly, I don't think that much more is being done in 2023 to preserve wilderness and save species. Or at least not enough.
The white rhino is now extinct -- Sudan, the world's last known male Northern white rhinoceros, died in Kenya on 19 March 2018 at age 45. The black rhino has gone extinct -- November 6, 2013--The Western black rhinoceros has officially been declared extinct by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The elusive snow leopard was listed on the IUCN Red List as endangered in 1986. In 2017, its status changed to vulnerable—one step below endangered—and it remains there to this day. However, the IUCN says the snow leopard's population numbers are still decreasing, and the cat continues to face a high risk of extinction.
So this book is well worth reading, especially if it ignites a fire in you to do something to help preserve the animals, and thus the planet. Anything. Doing anything at all will help.