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Orang Pendek: Sumatra's Forgotten Ape Paperback – November 1, 2011
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length332 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCFZ Press
- Publication dateNovember 1, 2011
- Dimensions6.14 x 0.69 x 9.21 inches
- ISBN-101905723822
- ISBN-13978-1905723829
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Product details
- Publisher : CFZ Press (November 1, 2011)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 332 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1905723822
- ISBN-13 : 978-1905723829
- Item Weight : 1.03 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.14 x 0.69 x 9.21 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,419,160 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #488 in Biology of Apes & Monkeys
- #1,165 in Endangered Species (Books)
- #9,719 in Folklore & Mythology Studies
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Richard Freeman is a full time cryptozoologist. He searches for and writes about unknown animals. The melodramatic may call him a monster hunter. He has hunted for creatures such as the yeti (a dark haired, giant, upright ape in North India), the Mongolian death worm (a much feared burrowing reptile of the Gobi), the giant anaconda (a monster constricting snake in South America), the ninki-nanka ( a dangerous dragon like beast from the swamps of West Africa), the almasty (a relic hominid in the Caucasus of Russia), orang-pendek (an upright walking ape in Indonesia), the naga (a giant, crested serpent in Indo-China) , the gul (a relic hominin from Tajikistan) and the Tasmanian wolf (a flesh eating marsupial in Tasmania). He is the Zoological Director at the Centre for Fortean Zoology. This is the world’s only full time mystery animal research organization. It is based in North Devon.
A former zookeeper Richard has worked with over 400 species from spiders to elephants but lists crocodiles as his favourite.
He has lectured at the Natural History Museum in London and the Grant Museum of Zoology. Richard is also a regular contributor to the magazine Fortean Times.
He has written books about cryptozoology, folklore and monsters including Dragons: More Than a Myth? , Explore Dragons, The Great Yokai Encyclopaedia: An A to Z of Japanese Monsters and Orang-Pendek: Sumatra’s Forgotten Ape. However he has recently branched out into horror and weird fantasy with Green Unpleasant Land: 18 Tales of British Horror and Hyakumonagatari: Tales of Japanese Horror Book One. His latest work is an overview of cryptozoology and a chronicle of his own expeditions entitled Adventures in Cryptozoloogy.
Richard is a massive fan of classic Doctor Who (60's/ 70's) and a lover of weird fiction and horror.
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The first part of the book describes orang-pendek and discusses various eyewitness reports.
The second part of the book discusses various similar creatures reported from all over the world. Some are, as the author acknowledges, of questionable authenticity but many others are quite well supported.
The third part of the book describes the author's own trips to Sumatra in search of the orang-pendek. Interestingly enough, a couple of his companions actually saw an orang-pendek and the team managed to successfully collect what appeared to be orang-pendek hairs.
The author considers the orang-pendek to be an undiscovered species of orang-utan, that evolved a ground dwelling lifestyle and bipedal gait. Near the end of the book there are some brief speculations on the evolutionary events that led to orang-pendek. I find the author's reasoning to be quite sound and share his view that the orang-pendek is most likely a type of orang-utan. Undiscovered orang-utan species are probably also the most likely candidates for the identity for a number of other Asian mystery primates, such as the yeh-teh (common yeti), as well.
Contrary to some opinions, it is extremely unlikely orang-pendek is a surviving Homo floresiensis, as beyond its bipedal gait its features are not at all human-like. However, the book does briefly discuss another mystery creature from Sumatra called the orang-kardil, who are far more human-like in both appearance and behaviour (they, for instance, make tools and fire and live in small tribes). It is possible that the orang-kardil are in fact a small surviving population of Homo floresiensis.
One of the most interesting things in the book is the final appendix, where the hair samples from Sumatra, thought to have come from an orang-pendek, are compared to the hair of various primates and non-primates from both Sumatra and elsewhere. As it turned out the hair collected was different from all the hairs it was compared to. This provides further support for the idea that there could well be an undiscovered ape species living in the jungles of Sumatra.
Sumatra’s jungles are not the wild paradises Ivan Sanderson used to write about, but sadder places, being chewed relentlessly away by coffee plantations and lumbering; the food is wretched, traveling back and forth tedious or terrifying, and moving through the jungle so physically demanding that the author vomits from exhaustion. This is not a Boy’s Own adventure, but a slog through leech-infested mud, yet the researchers and their guides get results, including hairs, footprints, hand-prints, and even a sighting; an orang-pendek in a tree apparently trying to avoid being seen.
The reader is left with the impression of a rare but perfectly real animal, the existence of which could be proven by a concerted, reasonably funded, effort (of course, a lot of cryptids give that impression). While its discovery would be of tremendous importance, the orang-pendek also seems like a rather scruffy creature compared to Sumatra’s awe-inspiring tigers. This is consistent with the matter-of-fact tone of the book, which, despite everything, will make you want to go orang-pendek hunting.
This book is the culmination of his many years' worth of expeditions to the Indonesian island of Sumatra in search of the so-called Orang pendek (literally meaning 'short person' in the native tongue), thought to be an unknown species of ape and reported since the Dutch first set foot on indonesian soil and - temporarily - claimed the territory for their own.
Richard has spoken to just about anyone and everyone who has had anything to do with tracking this Southern Hemisphere enigma. And - I should declare this upfront - I myself have accompanied him on one of his expeditions and can attest it's not for the faint-hearted (or the unfit!).
While concrete definitive evidence of the animal remains, for now, elusive, it can't be far off. On an island that still harbours an amazing diversity of creatures that includes leopards, tigers, orangutans, rhinos and many others, an undiscovered species of ape isn't as far-fetched as it might otherwise sound.
I wholeheartedly recommend this book - the most comprehensive study to date on the Orang pendek.

