First of all: full disclosure. I could have published THOUGHT at Lantern Books. Jensen's agent sent me the manuscript, and I said that I would publish the text but that the costs associated with publishing a glossy photography book, with all the quality of reproduction that photographers (rightly) expect, would make it too expensive for us. Happily enough, the book found a home with a non-profit publishing concern and the book is handsomely produced. The photographs are attractive, although I didn't find them all that compelling—except in as much as the animals themselves are wondrous to behold, confined and diminished though they are by and in their enclosures.
Jensen's text has lost none of the power I remembered when I read it in manuscript. He could have used some editing, but his honesty and focused, withering rage left me steaming at the egregious, outrageous, shockingly bald cruelty and exploitation required for zoos to exist. His argument, righteous and convincing, is that zoos are a function of our boredom, our commercialism, our exploitation of those weaker than ourselves, and our estrangement from (and contempt for) the natural world. The photographs amplify (and yet also, I believe, subtly contradict) his belief that wild animals isolated from their natural environment are not animals at all, because they do not express the aliveness and being-in-the-world that is the animal itself. The photos show us that, for all that we may remove the being from the world in which it has its being, a captive lion's face still captivates us. Something residual (although impoverished) remains to draw us in—if we would just look.
Nonetheless, I highly recommend this book as a wake-up call and call to arms for the natural world.