|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Wild Rituals explores how embracing the rituals of the animal
kingdom can make us more connected to ourselves, nature, and
others. Behavioral ecologist and world-renowned elephant scientist
Caitlin O'Connell dives into the rituals of elephants, apes,
zebras, rhinos, lions, whales, flamingos, and many more. This
fascinating read helps us better understand how we are similar to
wild animals, and encourages us to find healing, self-awareness,
community, and self-reinvention. Filled with fascinating stories on
10 different animal rituals Features original full-color photos,
from the Caribbean to the African savannah Demonstrates the
profound way we are similar to the wild creatures who captivate us
Wild Rituals journeys into the desert, tundra, and rainforest to
reveal the importance of rituals and how they can help us find a
simpler, more meaningful way of living. In a culture of technology
where we find ourselves living at a greater distance from nature
and each other, this remarkable book taps into the unspoken
languages of creatures around the world. Caitlin O'Connell is a
Harvard assistant professor and award-winning author who spent more
than 30 years studying animals in the wild. Makes a great gift for
anyone curious about nature, animals, and how humans compare to and
interact with both Add it to the shelf with books like Beyond
Words: What Animals Think and Feel by Carl Safina; Are We Smart
Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are? by Frans de Waal; The Inner
Life of Animals: Love, Grief, and Compassion-Surprising
Observations of a Hidden World by Peter Wohlleben; and The Soul of
an Octopus: A Surprising Exploration into the Wonder of
Consciousness by Sy Montgomery.
Meet Greg. He's a stocky guy with an outsized swagger. He's been
the intimidating, yet sociable don of his posse of friends -
including Abe, Keith, Mike, Kevin, and Freddie Fredericks - but one
arid summer the tide begins to shift and the third-ranking Kevin
starts to get ambitious and seeks a higher position within this
social club. But this is no ordinary tale of gangland betrayal -
Greg and his entourage are bull elephants in Etosha National Park,
Namibia, where, for the last twenty years, Caitlin O'Connell has
been a keen observer of their complicated friendships. In Elephant
Don, O'Connell, one of the leading experts on elephant
communication and social behavior, takes us inside the little-known
world of African male elephants, a world that is steeped in ritual,
where bonds are maintained by unexpected tenderness punctuated by
violence. Elephant Don tracks Greg and his group of bulls as
O'Connell tries to understand the vicissitudes of male friendship,
power struggles, and play. A frequently heart-wrenching portrayal
of commitment, loyalty, and affection between individuals yearning
for companionship, it vividly captures the incredible repertoire of
elephant behavior and communication. Greg, O'Connell shows, is
sometimes a tyrant and other times a benevolent dictator as he
attempts to hold on to his position at the top. Though Elephant Don
is Greg's story, it is also the story of O'Connell and the
challenges and triumphs of field research in environs more
hospitable to lions and snakes than scientists. Readers will be
drawn into dramatic tales of an elephant society at once exotic and
surprisingly familiar, as O'Connell's decades of close research
reveal extraordinary discoveries about a male society not wholly
unlike our own. Surely we've all known a Greg or two, and through
this book we may come to know them in a whole new light.
While observing a family of elephants in the wild, Caitlin
O'Connell noticed a peculiar listening behavior--the matriarch
lifted her foot and scanned the horizon, causing the other
elephants to follow suit, as if they could "hear" the ground. "The
Elephant's Secret Sense" is O'Connell's account of her
groundbreaking research into seismic listening and communication,
chronicling the extraordinary social lives of elephants over the
course of fourteen years in the Namibian wilderness.
This compelling odyssey of scientific discovery is also a frank
account of fieldwork in a poverty-stricken, war-ravaged country. In
her attempts to study an elephant community, O'Connell encounters
corrupt government bureaucrats, deadly lions and rhinos, poachers,
farmers fighting for arable land, and profoundly ineffective
approaches to wildlife conservation. "The Elephant's Secret Sense
"is ultimately a story of intellectual courage in the face of
seemingly insurmountable obstacles.
"I was transported by the author's superbly sensuous descriptions
of her years spent studying the animals. . . . Conjures a
high-class nature documentary film in prose."--Steven Poole,
"Guardian"
""
"A ride as rough and astonishing as the roads of the African
floodplain."--Joan Keener, "Entertainment Weekly"
""
"A successful combination of science and soulfulness, explaining
her groundbreaking theory of how elephants use seismic
communication. . . . O'Connell's account is studded with
sympathetic insights and well-turned phrases."--"Publishers
Weekly"
""
"This fascinating book reads like a fast-paced detective story of a
scientific discovery and adventure set in contemporary Africa. . .
. By the end, O'Connell takes her rightful place among the leading
biographers of the African elephant."--Iain Douglas-Hamilton,
author of "Among the Elephants"""
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|