Produced in association with the Jane Goodall Institute on the occasion of Goodall's 40th anniversary of groundbreaking research with the chimpanzees of Gombe, this beautifully illustrated volume traces her work from its singular beginnings to the Jane Goodall Institute's present-day international activities. 65 full-color and 30 duotone photos.
Contents: Foreword / Gilbert M. Grosvenor -- A Message from Jane Goodall -- The Beginning -- The Chimpanzees -- The Realization -- The People -- The Promise -- The Jane Goodall Institute.
This is a coffee table book filled with great pictures, interesting stories, and (as the title suggests) and overview of Goodall's first 40 years at Gombe, in Tanzania.
I had fun reading the stories and looking at the pictures. It's a nicely put together history of the subject matter.
Really interesting. Quick overview of Jane's life and career at Gombe and around the world.
Lots of great photographs. Overall a short book but I liked it and I'm interested in reading more Jane Goodall books!! She seems like a really amazing woman.
Read in one sitting! Great for anyone interested in women's efforts in the biological sciences and/or primate behavior. It accounts Goodall's work in Gombe, including accounts of both her research/life, as well as the lives of the chimps. Indeed, some of the accounts were so detailed and perfect that the reader begins to feel a deep connection to the chimpanzee families, especially the "F" colony. As someone who works with monkeys and is interested in pursuing a path similar to Goodall's, I found this book to be a perfect peek into Goodall's work and a great stepping stone for those who wish to pursue the field more.
This is an extremely detailed and wonderful account of Jane Goodall's 40 years among African primates. I checked it out of the university library when I was a college student, and I must admit that I told them I lost it (and willfully paid for it) so I could keep it. Which makes it one of my most expensive books.
The reader becomes intimately acquainted with specific primates and their families. I felt so attached that I cried near the end.
The book is about Jane Goodall's lifelong relationship with chimpanzees in Gombe. It is a short, easy-to-read book with beautiful pictures of chimpanzees. When I read about Jane Goodall, I always felt a sense of warmth. Her voice and stories fill you with optimism.
I like that it is set up in chronological order and it walks you through how Jane Goodall became Jane Goodall and all the different aspects of her goal to help chimps.