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Among the Great Apes: Adventures on the Trail of Our Closest Relatives
 
 
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Among the Great Apes: Adventures on the Trail of Our Closest Relatives [Hardcover]

Paul Raffaele (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 9, 2010

Join Paul Raffaele, whom the Washington Post calls the "last of the great, old-fashioned adventure writers," is on a journey to meet the last great apes living in the wild.

Humans have long felt a deep attraction to the great apes: bonobos, chimpanzees, orangutans, and gorillas. We see a reflection of ourselves in their faces, in their mannerisms, and in their interactions with kin. But we also look to them for contrast. Part of how we define ourselves as human rests with recognizing the differences between us and the great apes, in spite of the substantial amounts of DNA we share.

In decades past, many great primatologists, including Dian Fossey, Jane Goodall, and Richard Wrangham, have dedicated their lives to the observation and study of the great apes in their natural habitats. Unfortunately, many of these sheltering places no longer exist. The great apes live in some of the most volatile regions on our planet, lands plagued by civil unrest, poverty, environmental degradation, and corrupt governments.

In Among the Great Apes, acclaimed nature journalist Paul Raffaele goes into the wild to see how our closest relatives are faring today. He takes us through isolated jungles and misty mountain forests, sharing wonderfully intimate observations of ape life paired with the most current research about their behavior.

Raffaele introduces us to leading conservationists and researchers working to save and study the apes. But, best of all, he gets up close to these amazing animals. He describes orangutans fashioning umbrellas from long leaves, a young chimpanzee mothering a "baby" log, and the bonobos' lively ritual of swinging like gymnasts through the treetops before building elaborate nests to sleep in. Moving from Borneo to the Congo, Among the Great Apes brings us to the natural habitats of all the species and subspecies of the great apes—a trip possible for perhaps the last time.


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Primatologists estimate that within 50 years, the only great apes left will be in zoos or in some form of wildlife sanctuary. Raffaele, feature writer for Smithsonian magazine and book author (Among the Cannibals, 2008), takes readers along as he travels into the wild to meet all four species of great ape in their natural habitat. First meeting the mountain gorillas in Rwanda, the author treks up into Dian Fossey’s mountainous habitat and discusses her life, the Rwandan genocide, and gorilla behavior. He then moves on to East Africa and the region’s chimpanzees, telling of his dismay at the differences between gorilla society and that of chimpanzees, whom he calls “thugs.” The bonobos offer the bigger contrast to chimpanzees as these apes use sex instead of violence to resolve disputes. When locating western lowland gorillas Raffaele is charged by an enraged silverback male protecting his offspring. Finally, when observing orangutans at a feeding station he discovers that they understand trade—after he moved a bucket of fruit away from a female she took his camera bag, only returning it when he returned the fruit. Readers are brought closer to their nearest relatives. --Nancy Bent

Review

“Swashbuckling. . . . A dark thrill ride to the extremes of behavior . . . reaches beyond adventure anthropology and achieves a tone of urgent humanity.” (Kirkus Reviews )

“[A] modern, non-fiction version of Conan Doyle’s The Lost World: a time-warp glimpse into man’s most primordial nightmare; exciting, fantastic, horrific—and a very well-written travel narrative.” (Peter Nichols, author of A VOYAGE FOR MADMEN )

Praise for AMONG THE CANNIBALS:“Simply fascinating. . . . Raffaele’s book is worth devouring.” (Associated Press )

“A fantastic book that’s also a really emotional ride. Anyone who cares about animals will benefit hugely from reading it.”—Shaun Ellis, star of Animal Planet’s Living With the Wolfman and author of The Man Who Lives With Wolves (Shaun Ellis, star of Animal Planet's LIVING WITH THE WOLFMAN and author of THE MAN WHO LIVES WITH WOLVES. )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Smithsonian; 1 edition (February 9, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061671835
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061671838
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.6 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,466,273 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An extraordinary book, about our closest relatives..., June 12, 2010
By 
This review is from: Among the Great Apes: Adventures on the Trail of Our Closest Relatives (Hardcover)
Author Paul Raffaele braved leeches, bandits, guerillas, cliffs, blisters, rain, and the residual affects of shrapnel received in a Afghanistan war zone to put this book together. But it is a magnificent book, a sobering book, and a terrifying book, all at the same time.

Those gorillas, bonobos, chimpanzees, and orangutans are four of the five Great Apes, and all five have their difficulties living on Planet Earth. Oh, the fifth? Those are Homo sapiens... us. We may be close to numbering seven billion, but the cruelty and barbarity that we see human apes treating one another in Africa and elsewhere clearly is indicative of how we treat our close cousins. Raffaele continually reflects on this: "A government that refuses to protect its own children and women from widespread sexual slavery, and refuses to prosecute those who trade in sexual slavery, is hardly likely to give a moment's thought to the fate of its great apes" (p. 260).

Poaching, bushmeat hunting, illegal and "legal" logging, agricultural conversion of forests to palm oil plantations, and tourism all affect the population levels of the Great Apes, and all are in decline. Might we lose mountain gorillas in the next 50 years, along with Atlantic bluefin tuna, Pacific leatherback turtles, and Florida panthers?

Raffaele is an explorer, and he works hard to visit populations of these apes on their terms. He relates the history, biogeography, biology, and behavior of these apes, and writes of his experiences in their own natural habitats. It is striking how accepting and peaceful these apes are around humans. It is really rare for a person to actually be harmed. Obviously, the reverse is not true. Western hunters and collectors took their pound of flesh for two hundred years, and governments and politicians continue to find ways to make the Great Apes pay for their very existence. NGOs bring currency into countries to establish research and conservation centers, and many people in Western countries seem willing to donate, especially for organizations that care for orphaned babies and young apes.

"Ecotourism," or nature-based tourism, involving mountain gorillas or other apes can be quite lucrative, and families of apes are habituated to allow humans to get close. Of course, a habituated ape really can't tell the difference between a tourist and a killer. "While habituation of the mountain gorillas on the other side of the Virunga volcanoes in Rwanda through gorilla tourism has saved them, it is a different story in the Congo. Habituation allowed the killers to approach Rugendo and his [gorilla] family without prompting them to flee, as mountain gorillas unused to human presence would have done. The bodies were not stripped of flesh, but left untouched or burned where they had been murdered. Clearly, the killers were not poachers. As I look at the tragic pictures of the bodies of Rugendo and his four females, I cannot help wondering whether they might still be alive if we had just left them alone" (p. 60).

Although this is a book about apes, this is also a book about Raffaele's travels. The people he meets and the places he visits are all part of this story. And his tongue is sharp when necessary:

"Our conversation turns to zoos and their place in modern times. After visiting zoos all over the world, I believe they are an anachronism, places where captured or zoo-bred animals are kept in cruel confinement for the daily hordes of visitors. I believe that even the best zoos treat their captives in a dreadful way. ...I suggest to Peter that confining great apes in tiny compounds is like keeping a human in a room the size of a bathroom for the remaining days of his life, with hundreds of strange creatures filing by the glass walls each day to peer at him" (p. 335-336).

Peter, a Houston Zoo employee, replies, "'That's the wrong approach. We call them ambassador animals. They are the ambassadors presenting the wild animals to zee visitors.' Raffaele replies, 'Ambassador? There's not a hint in that word of the cruelty you inflict on zoo animals'" (p. 335-336).

You will learn a lot from this book. You'll "meet" people passionate about saving the Great Apes. You'll learn about people that have no problem eating a gorilla. You'll decide for yourself whether bonobos can "speak" using sign language or computer-assisted technologies. Raffaele will have you assessing the creativity, the intelligence, and the "bestiality" of gorillas, chimps, bonobos, and orangutans. And you'll apply those measures to the human race as well.

Excellent, excellent book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Informative and Mesmerizing, November 15, 2010
By 
I have read many books about the great apes, and this is definitely one of my favorites. There is a lot of information on each species, but also paints a picture (often a terrifying one) of the type of environment these beautiful creatures live in. Humans have the power to destroy or save the great apes. It's hard to blame the poachers completely when you understand that they only kill apes because it's a way to feed their families. This book really gives people an idea of the complete instability of each ape's environment and what must be done in order to save them. If you want to know the whole story, this is the book for you. I greatly admire the courage of the author to venture into so many dangerous locations to gather all of this information for us.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Serious, funny, witty, informative, highly readable, June 20, 2010
By 
born into this (Roanoke, Virginia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Among the Great Apes: Adventures on the Trail of Our Closest Relatives (Hardcover)
I found this a very satisfying blend of travelogue and great-ape primatology. Besides the apes we learn a good deal about the local peoples (as well as the larger African socio-political context though the text is never burdened by such) and the scientific personalities that have spent so much time studying these Ape-people. The author does an excellent job of bringing us up to speed on the state of primatology--what we know and don't know-- as well as unpacking the various controversies and existential threats to the apes.

I was surprised that he doesn't paint as rosy a picture of the bonobo as some others have. It could be that when you get clobbered by one it's hard to think of them as completely tender loving. But certainly there is no whiff of an agenda from the author and he doesn't hesitate to communicate some unpleasant realities of local tribal practices.

There are some great on the scene stories and many interesting characters along the way. And I liked how the author kept a compare-contrast narrative going about the differences among the apes. Even so if you just want a book focusing on the science and behavior of the apes themselves there might be better books--else you'll sometimes find yourself doing a lot of skimming to get to the ape bits. But if you are interested in the whole 'being there' experience sprinkled with little stories and anecdotes about the local culture and the scientists, conservationists, and others who have spent much of their lives in the jungle then I doubt you could ask for a better book, or companion-host.



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