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Beyond Innocence: An Autobiography in Letters The Later Years
 
 
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Beyond Innocence: An Autobiography in Letters The Later Years [Hardcover]

Jane Goodall (Author), Dale Peterson (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 12, 2001
This second volume of Jane Goodall’s autobiography in letters covers the years of her greatest triumphs and her deepest tragedies. During this time she made many of her most important discoveries about chimpanzee behavior — including the dark discovery that like us, they wage war and commit murder. She gave birth to a son, Grub, but her marriage to his father, Hugo van Lawick, came to an end. When some Stanford University students working with her were kidnapped by guerrillas, she was thrust into an international controversy. She fell in love with and married Derek Bryceson. After surviving a plane crash with him, she realized that her life had been entrusted to her for a reason. A visit to an American laboratory where chimps were injected with HIV made that reason clear, and she began to dedicate herself not just to understanding chimpanzees but to saving them. Derek’s death in 1980 was a terrible blow, but afterward she threw herself even more relentlessly into the battle to save our closest relatives and to repair the health of the planet.
AFRICA IN MY BLOOD told of a young woman finding her life’s work in the place of her dreams. BEYOND INNOCENCE tells of the events that shattered many of those dreams and changed her from a rather private observer to a public crusader.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The second volume of primatologist Goodall's personal and professional correspondence, this book is a welcome sequel to the critically acclaimed Africa in My Blood. Like that collection, it is edited by Goodall's sometime coauthor Dale Peterson (The Deluge and the Ark), who has wisely retained Goodall's erratic use of punctuation (e.g., multiple exclamation points and emphatic dashes) rather than cleaning it up. As a result, these letters have an immediacy and freshness that a more traditional autobiography could not have conveyed. Goodall's tendency to describe major scientific discoveries as "so super" is both charming and moving. Writing to her family about the chance discovery that ostriches use stones to break open eggs, thus putting them in the same tool-utilizing class as chimps, she exclaims, "I have to tell you our most EXCITING news... It is dead secret at the moment till published in Nature. A NEW TOOL!!!!! Isn't it FANTASTIC!!" Readers may also be amused by Goodall's somewhat dismissive remarks about fellow researcher Dian Fossey ("the gorilla girl"), her offhand comments about her own groundbreaking research ("my chimp stuff") and her habit of juxtaposing descriptions of her own baby with those of chimp offspring. They also will be fascinated to learn that some of Goodall's writings on more disturbing topics such as a polio epidemic were rejected by National Geographic on the grounds that they were "too sad." (July 12) Forecast: These letters confirm Goodall's reputation as a writer whose capacity to empathize with the animals she studies truly separates her from the pack. Her fans will clamor for this book.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Readers of Africa in My Blood: An Autobiography in Letters might think that Goodall had already done it all, but this new volume reveals how much there was to come: dedication to protecting as well as studying chimpanzees, plus personal events that included the birth of a son, the end of a marriage, and new love found and tragically lost.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (July 12, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618125205
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618125203
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #207,767 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

JANE GOODALL continues to study and write about primate behavior. She founded the Gombe Stream Research Center in Gombe National Park, Tanzania, and the Jane Goodall Institute for Wild Life Research, Education, and Conservation to provide ongoing support for field research on wild chimpanzees. She is the author of many books, including two autobiographies in letters, Africa in My Blood and Beyond Innocence. Today Dr. Goodall spends much of her time lecturing, sharing her message of hope for the future, and encouraging young people to make a difference in their world.

 

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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Moving Painfully Beyond the Gombe Preserve, June 4, 2001
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 109,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Beyond Innocence: An Autobiography in Letters The Later Years (Hardcover)
This book continues the autobiography of Dr. Jane Goodall through her letters that began with Africa in My Blood. Dr. Goodall has been a prolific letter writer throughout her life, and this volume contains many interesting and revealing examples of her personal views. The book's strength is in taking you behind the scenes into events that are more briefly alluded to in her formal writing. The editor, Dale Peterson, has done an outstanding job of putting the letters in context and summarizing their material in useful ways. The editing is stronger than in Africa in My Blood. Despite the quality of the volume, I still prefer Africa in My Blood as a more moving and powerful expression of Dr. Goodall's life. In these letters, you will generally find her more reserved and distracted than in Africa in My Blood. I do recommend that you read this volume. You will add usefully to your knowledge of Dr. Goodall.

To get some sense of how many letters Dr. Goodall has written, this book contains selections from over 2000 which contain a total of between one and two million words! During one two day stretch in early February (7-8) 1973, Dr. Goodall wrote 63 letters!

The flavor of the book is pretty well captured by this quote about how the book "traces a falcon's rising gyre that turns beyond innocence through experience into wisdom, on to focused dedication."

The book is organized around themes, so that you can more clearly see the connections.

A delightful surprise came in the beginning with a description of how Dr. Goodall and her first husband discovered Egyptian vulures using rocks to break open ostrich eggs, one of the few examples of tool-using animals ever discovered. Dr. Goodall is also known for having uncovered the chimpanzee use of tools, as well. There is a nice photograph to show this in process. You will enjoy the many family photographs in the book, as well.

During this period of time, Dr. Goodall becomes a mother and raises her son, informally known as Grub for his eating habits. She also accompanies her first husband on many expeditions to the Serengeti. The book also details the evolution of Gombe into a permanent research site, including the awful setbacks when researchers died and when a major kidnapping occurred. The many research findings of those years from Gombe are included including the effect of the polio epidemic, and the discovery of cannibalism and war among the chimpanzees.

The book provides more glimpses of how she feel in love with and married her second husband, and her reactions to his untimely death due to cancer.

Dr. Goodall has become an animal rights advocate, and the beginnings of that awareness are developed here. She saw her first bio-medical laboratory with chimpanzees in it during 1987, and was appalled by what she saw. Since then, she has worked to change the way these labs are run to honor the high intelligence and social nature of the chimpanzees. Much remains to be done.

I encourage you to also read her other works. Having gotten to know the person, you should know her work as well. Chronologically, In the Shadow of Man is first. Learning with her is probably better than jumping ahead and reading the latest research first. Her way of describing the research makes you see the chimpanzees as individuals. To start at the end would be like reading a novel backwards.

Dr. Goodall's amazing life should be a source of strength to all. Where could your curiosity and passion take you that no one else has gone before? Do you have the courage to act on that curiosity and passion? Are you prepared for the inevitable pain? Be sure to take yourself seriously in this assessment. Dr. Goodall seems quite surprised by all that she accomplished. Your potential probably exceeds what you think you can do, as well.

Look in new places and in new ways!

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fascinating Life, July 31, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Beyond Innocence: An Autobiography in Letters The Later Years (Hardcover)
I didn't believe that a second volume of Jane Goodall's letters could be as good as the first (Africa in My Blood), but this one is even better. The first volume contains the better-known parts of her life: the young woman going out to Africa, her apprenticeship with Leakey and at Gombe, her courageous research and amazing discoveries about chimpanzee intelligence, tool use, and warfare. Less familiar but no less compelling is the story of her life-beyond-science, her new and powerful role as a citizen-activist for the preservation of endangered species and their fragile environments. In her efforts to educate the world about the plight of this species that shares so much genetic material with humans, Goodall has never flagged in her perseverance. Her efforts have taken her from the village schoolroom to the halls of congresses and government palaces all over the world, and her correspondence reflects the intensity of her political activity, her untiring attempts to make people see their planet anew and to assume responsibility for their environments, whether in Africa or in LA. At the same time that the second volume shows the world of her correspondence opening up to include a much wider audience, though, she still writes her chatty, witty, delightful letters to family and friends.

Jane Goodall is a much more complex person than either her books or the popular conceptions of her, generated by the media, would suggest. These letters show a woman who endured considerable suffering and stress, who maintained her faith and optimism in the face of crushing realities, and who has inspired multitudes to change their views of Africa, of science, of women, and of chimpanzees, but in these letters you feel that she's at kitchen table in your house scribbling away, or that you've received a wonderful letter in your real, not virtual, mailbox. Read this book! You'll be surprised by what you find.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More great letters from Jane Goodall, July 30, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Beyond Innocence: An Autobiography in Letters The Later Years (Hardcover)
Many people may take up Beyond Innocence because they loved Africa in My Blood, because they think highly of Jane Goodall as a woman, scientist, and activist who commands an enormous presence in the world of animal and environmental studies. I came to the book, though, because of the writing, both the lucid, witty, warm letters themselves, with their brilliant details and insights, and also the superb editing and contextual work by Dale Peterson, who gives us the complete person, with her strengths and weaknesses, the myths and the truth. This is a literary achievement of the highest order, a poignant reminder of what we've lost in the era of electronic communication. Jane Goodall wrote constantly, and she wrote beautifully, and her letters reveal worlds and worlds--the worlds of her subjects, her subjectivity, and her readers. You will get a completely different Goodall here from the one you see in her books and in the biographies. This is an indispensable book, one that deserves to stand among the monuments of correspondence as a literary form.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
IN LATE JULY 1966, Jane Goodall and Hugo van Lawick, along with Hugo's brother Michael and two African assistants, Benjamen and Philip, set out from Nairobi in two vehicles on a photographic safari. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
chimp book, hyena chapter, little hugo, innocent killers, darling family, beyond innocence, provisioning area, laboratory chimpanzees, scratching rocks, chimpanzee research, baby chimps, other chimps, wild chimpanzees, polio epidemic, film team, chimpanzee behavior
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Jane Goodall, United States, National Geographic, New York, The Bryceson Years, The Laboratory Nightmare, Gombe Stream, Leakey Foundation, Domestic Interlude, Geza Teleki, Little Bee, The Dark Side, Derek Bryceson, George Dove, Gombe West, Pointe Noire, Sierra Leone, Louis Leakey, Madam Bee, Endangered Species Act, Ngorongoro Crater, David Bygott, Munge Clan, Paul Ehrlich, Peter Marler
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