Junglekeeper
What It Takes to Change the World
-
-
5.0 • 5 Ratings
-
-
- $13.99
Publisher Description
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Most people assume that the world has been explored and true adventure is dead: This book is one man’s rebuttal. Explorer and conservationist Paul Rosolie shares his incredible life in the Amazon rainforest—and what we can learn from the people fighting to protect it.
“On behalf of the forests that I love, thank you, Paul, for writing this book.”—Jane Goodall
Deep in the Peruvian jungle, there exists a corner of the world that remains untouched—one teeming with giant anacondas, where the haunting cries of howler monkeys send brightly colored macaws shooting across the canopy. It’s an ecosystem of stupendous biodiversity, uncontacted tribes, and adventures that most people don’t even dare to dream of.
When he first set foot in the jungle, Rosolie was a dyslexic kid from Brooklyn who struggled to graduate from high school but had an undeniable calling to the outdoors. He was lucky enough to meet the indigenous naturalist Juan Julio Durand, and together, over two decades, they have created Junglekeepers, an organization that has found a way to halt deforestation and protect more than 110,000 acres—inspiring millions along the way by documenting their progress online. But this work takes grit, and years in, Rosolie and Durand are past their “barefoot machete days,” grappling with chain saws, massive fires, illegal miners, and the worst of humanity. Here, Rosolie brings you up close and personal with one of the wildest places on the planet and tells the incredible story of “first contact” with one of the most mysterious uncontacted tribes on Earth: the Mashco Piro.
This book is about the profound power of saying yes: yes to one’s calling, yes to sticking with your dream when it comes at a high cost, and yes to taking a stand to save what might otherwise be gone in a generation. It’s a story of calling, connectedness, and hope.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Conservationist Rosolie (Mother of God) shares an energizing account of a lifetime spent protecting more than 100,000 acres of wilderness in Peru. A lover of nature since boyhood, the author signed up for an expedition to the Amazonian jungle at age 18. Seeing the devastation being wrought on the rainforest, particularly the new roads cropping up around the Trans-Amazonian highway, motivated him to dedicate his life to conservation. In 2014, he founded Junglekeepers, an organization that protects the Peruvian jungle by employing rangers to protect tracts of land. Here. Rosolie catalogs the dire threats posed by loggers and drug cartels who are slashing and burning their way through the rainforest, wreaking havoc on local ecosystems and the homes of Indigenous tribes. But he's also refreshingly optimistic about the future, rejecting "antihuman" narratives that "we are a plague on the planet... and there's nothing that can be done" by pointing to activists who have committed themselves to saving the environment. More personally, he uses the story of finding his own "calling"—a spiritual process in which he "lost my mind to find my path"—to advocate for the importance of following one's dreams, even when it "requires cutting away most of what constitutes a normal life, parts of you that stitches can't fix." Honest yet hopeful, this will provide plenty of inspiration for budding conservationists.
Customer Reviews
10/10 Excellent Read !!
Looking for adventure let this book take you there a true labor of love, Much Love !! ♥️🔥