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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Heart of the Jungle
"Jaguar" is the fascinating story of one scientist's journey to study and protect the elusive jaguar, the third largest cat in the world.

Written like a book of fiction, "Jaguar" reads smoothly, capturing your attention and curiosity with its first-person portrayal of life in an alien world: the jungles of Belize. It is peopled with the Maya, a culture rich...
Published on November 28, 2004 by Dakota

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13 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Sensationalist nonsense
I have spent many years traveling in Belize. Like many people, I was fascinated by Alan Rabinowitz's book, "Jaguar" when it was first published. However, the book reads more like fiction than a factual account. Rabinowitz portrays himself in a flattering light as the savior of these magnificent beasts from the heathen natives. The fact is that Rabinowitz was...
Published on November 3, 2000 by James Scott


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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Heart of the Jungle, November 28, 2004
By 
Dakota "daxydakota" (Southern California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
"Jaguar" is the fascinating story of one scientist's journey to study and protect the elusive jaguar, the third largest cat in the world.

Written like a book of fiction, "Jaguar" reads smoothly, capturing your attention and curiosity with its first-person portrayal of life in an alien world: the jungles of Belize. It is peopled with the Maya, a culture rich in history yet suffering poverty, disease, and insignificance in modern times. And in this world exists the jaguar, a powerful cat who is rarely seen and is not a man-eater, yet is hunted almost to extinction for its exquisite spotted fur and because, quite simply, people fear it.

I read "Jaguar" in about 2 days, and fell completely in love with its spirit. The author, a young scientist, struggled hard to successfully understand the lives of these cats within its world and to keep it alive, often to his own personal tragedies. His description of the jungle is unromantic and riveting, as are the terrible hardships that go with it. I will never forget all the diseases, snakes, and parasites than run amok in this story, practically characters of their own. One lesson I came back with is how thankful I am to live in a country with exceptional sanitation and medical care.

"Jaguar" is haunting. You can't finish it without wishing to enter that dark, dangerous jungle of the majestic jaguar. It draws out the adventurer in you. It stirs your compassion.

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great book, September 1, 2001
By 
Marceau Ratard (Metairie, LA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
This book really gives you a feel for how conservation based research is carried out in the tropics. The research was carried out in the early 1980's in the Cockscomb basin in Belize. The area is now a jaguar preserve and if your headed to Belize it is a must see. The book describes the 2 years that Dr. Rabinowitz spent researching jaguar movements in Belize. You really get a feel for how conservation research interacts and sometimes conflicts with local villagers, the government, and how it is preserved in the US. I reads like an adventure story and is not boring. You certainly don't need to be biologist to like this book. I think that anybody could take something away from this story. If your going to Belize, then you should really consider adding this to the list of books to read before you go.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Review of "Jaguar"", March 23, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
This book is essential reading for anyone interested in the Central American Rainforest. It has a little bit of everything..field notes, natural history, local culture, paranormal experiences, adventure, and romance. The book was engaging and easy to read. I learned a lot about jaguars and the struggle to protect them. The only drawback was Rabinowitz's negative portrayl of the present day Mayans. Undoubtedly, the author is a scientist and not an anthropologist, but i do feel that he should have shown more respect for their culture and more understanding of their situation.
I reccomend this book, and then i reccomend traveling to Cockscomb Basin in Belize to fully appreciate the conservation effort. Even if you can't get there, you will feel like you have been there after reading this book.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent read, March 20, 2002
By 
Ravnwing (Briarwood, NY) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
This book will appeal to readers who have a specific interest in jaguars and those with more overall conservation leanings. Dr. Rabinowitz is a pioneer in research on this elusive animal and his groundbreaking work shows just how vital the jaguar is to rainforest ecologist, and the devestating impact man has had on this magnificent species. The book is also a remarkable story about the animals and people of the rainforest, who we get to know through Dr. Rabinowitz's exciting narrative. I found myself laughing and crying all at once and was not able to put this book down!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars No yawns in this field journal, September 4, 2000
By 
margaret eisenberger (chesterfield, missouri USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
This book is a record of Alan's efforts to set aside land for the jaguar in Belize. It is also a breath-taking, hair-raising, heart-breaking roller coaster ride through the ups and downs in the daily life of a field research biologist. His narrow escapes leave you gasping. You have to lay the book down and sob when he cradles a dying jaguar in his arms. The scenes in this book play over and over in your mind as clearly as if you had seen it in a movie, as when a he has to escape from a jaguar which unexpectedly charges him after recovering from the tranquilizeer he had injected. He is as macho as they come and yet he is not afraid to admit to moments of bias, of ignorance, of impatience and frustration, of fear, or of failure. He incorporates the scientific data he collects along with cultural observations of the Maya people he works with. His brushes with the supernatural are surprising, coming from a scientist, and yet in keeping with his open minded nature.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars recommend, January 30, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
The ability to change the world we live in to the betterment of others--human or otherwise--is something many of us aspire toward. Mr. Rabinowitz accomplishes this very goal in this wonderfully told account of how he initiated the creation of a far-reaching preserve for predatory jungle cats. Mr. Rabinowtiz seems to understand that human destiny is linked to our compassion for our fellow species. His struggle to prevail over government red tape, self-interested forest wardens and even the near-sighted needs of indigenous peoples is told here with great compassion and drama. The author's ability to criticize his own shortcomings and self-doubts lends this work its true strength and gives the reader insight into how we might all try to do better and work for good in our lives.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Armchair adventure and hair-raising thrills, jaguar style., August 21, 2002
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
I never would have chosen this book, but it showed up in my mail and, well, what else is there to do but read it? I'm so glad I did.

This is a fascinating story of a zoologist who, in 1983, went into the rain forest of Central America to study the jaguar in its native habitat.

"On Dec. 2, 1984, the Cockscomb Basin was declared a National Forest Reserve, with a no hunting provision for the protection of the jaguar. This made Belize the first country in the world to protect jaguars."

This book tells an utterly fantastic tale -- sometimes terrifying -- of how that came to be. It portrays a world most safely enjoyed from the comfort of an armchair; a very personal story that is a combination of natural history and hair-raising adventure in the Stanley Livingston tradition.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It read's like a thriller but tell's us about reality., September 26, 1997
By 
arendsbv@pi.net (Oldenzaal, The Netherlands) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jaguar (Paperback)
Rabonowitz succeeds in telling us in a gripping, dramatic and humurous way how to take care about our most sacred treasure: our nature and al what's still living in it. His struggle against red tape, changing habits of people shows us what's realy worth investing in. In this case the preservation of the jaguar in central america. His writing is so powerfull that the 'innocent' reader want's to go there and help him. If all people would read this book, it would make a change in really taking care of our nature.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Jaguar: One Man's Struggle to Establish the World's First Jaguar Preserve, September 15, 2009
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
Rabinowitz is extraordinary...his depiction of the Mayan culture in Belize is right on. The jungle is exceptional, and seeing for myself the great spaces that the Jaguar and smaller cats and animals live in, I appreciate what he has done. The Jaguar now have a chance to survive in Central and South America and migrate through the corridors people like Rabinowitz have helped create. A must read for conservationists.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining and instructive, November 19, 2007
This review is from: Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve (Paperback)
"Jaguar" is an interesting mix of memoir and natural history, with eye-opening descriptions of life in a remote Mayan village. I read the book while at Cockscomb Basin. I met people who lived there when "Dr. Alan" was doing his work, and they said the book is accurate (though it perhaps made things seem "better" than they were, which is a startling statement once you've read how hard life was for the Maya in this book). He writes in a surprisingly engaging style for a scientist and tells a satisfyingly complete story. There is also a lot in this book for readers who enjoy adventure travel narratives in which people endure extreme hardship and live through things we would never like to experience in person.
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Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve
Jaguar: One Man's Struggle To Establish The World's First Jaguar Preserve by Alan Rabinowitz (Paperback - February 2, 2000)
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