From Publishers Weekly
Ecology-minded youngsters have reason to cheer of late, with the increasing number of titles (such as this one) that examine various endangered habitats of the earth. Loosely structured as a travelogue, this first-person account describes the author's trip to the heart of the Amazon basin. He encounters a world in flux, where human colonization threatens to decimate the jungle and its countless natural resources. Lourie demonstrates how the culture and way of life of a region's people is determined by the environment: seasoned Amazon settlers and Indians harmoniously fish, tap latex from rubber trees and pan for gold in the river, while colonists new to the area destructively burn the rain forest to create open land for farming. Unfortunately, his book lacks immediacy and focus. Lourie's tone is more maudlin than passionate, and his frequent digressions and changes in tense prove confusing. Santilli's photographs fail to breathe much life into the expedition; his subjects--often shot from a great distance--have a dusty, filtered look. Ages 8-12.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From School Library Journal
Grade 4-6-- From the first scene of a hazy sunrise over a placid tributary of the Amazon River, the striking full-color photographs vividly evoke this place and its people. Lourie's narrative is a personal account of a journey down the river that incorporates much factual detail. Not intended as a comprehensive overview, the representative incidents give insight into the variety of life found along the Amazon. The author relates how, as one of the world's largest producers of gold, Brazil is degrading the river's ecosystem by introducing deadly mercury, which is used in panning for the precious element. The chapter on the Indians describes and illustrates the children as they play, swim, and fish using a natural poison to stun the day's catch. Chain saws and fires are shown to be ripping apart the jungle, and when it goes, readers are told, so will this way of life. The photographs of the fires are haunting, and the entire book creates an indelible picture of this endangered system. There is no index, but there are helpful chapter headings. --Frances E. Millhouser, Reston Regional Library, VA
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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