Five Heartfelt Stars *****
Favorite book of 2022 (so far)
Outstanding and moving memoir by the author, Laura Coleman! Laura decided on a whim to volunteer at an animal sanctuary in Bolivia at the tail-end of a back-packing ramble around South America. When Laura shows up, the sanctuary Communidad Inti Wara Yassi (CIWY) is just scraping by. It is a last resort for animals donated by zoos, injured by the illegal pet trade, etc. There are monkeys, pias, a coati, wild boar, tropical birds and sixteen wild cats when Laura arrives. Most of these animals have been abused throughout their lives, but that is just background here. The story focuses on what Laura and the many volunteers and staff do as they try to provide a better, stable, life filled with love and respect for the animals.
Laura is shell-shocked by the living conditions. Multiple people share bunk houses and beds with monkeys, insects and other animals, the dirt and mud and mosquitos and other biting insects are constants. Some days there is water for cold showers. The animals are difficult and the whole situation is very physical and frightening to Laura. She is volunteered to work with a cat, a Puma named Wayra. She spends time with her every day, getting to know her, walking her and feeding her. This is the beginning of Laura's discovery of who she truly is deep inside.
This memoir focuses on the everyday living in the jungle, the animals and people who populate the sanctuary, the relationship between Laura and the animals, particularly Wayra, and between Laura and the other volunteers, herself and even the country of Bolivia. It also focuses on how we grow and change when we find something that we are passionate about.
Unexpectedly, this book is about so much more, however. It is about watching the deforestation that is taking place in the Amazon, up close and personal. Seeing the effects of habitat loss immediately on the animals, the earth, the sanctuary and the people of Bolivia. The logging of thousands of trees per day, the fires, the floods, the impact of climate change as humans continue to remove century old trees to create farmland and raise mono-crops like soy, palm-oil, caco. All of this is written through Laura's experience, not in a scientific way, which makes the impact of what she is writing about even more impactful in my opinion.
Having spent time in the Peruvian Amazon, myself, studying NeoTropical Forest Ecology in a dorm situation similar to what Laura describes, I could perfectly picture this sanctuary, animals and volunteers. I enjoyed Laura's flowery descriptions of the plants, animals, insects, odors, colors and sounds that surround you in the jungle. It's a lot, and truly defies description and she accurately portrays the beauty and overwhelm of the jungle and the situation.
Highly deserving of the Goodreads Choice Award for Memoir & Autobiography (2021)! Recommended for those who care about animals, wild animals, human growth, and the impact of humans on the climate. This will be a life-changing book, I suspect, for many who read it.