A breathtaking close-up look at Africa's animals and natural wonders from one of our great wildlife pioneers
Alan Root was born in London in 1937 but moved to Kenya as a young boy. He dropped out of school at sixteen but soon found himself behind the camera. He married Joan Thorpe in 1961 and together they produced an array of award-winning wildlife films including Baobab- Portrait of a Tree, commissioned by David Attenborough, Safari by Balloon, The Year of the Wildebeest and Castles of Clay, which was nominated for an Oscar. Alan won over sixty awards during his career, including an Emmy, three Lifetime Achievement Awards an OBE. Alan Root died in August 2017.
Written by a consummate wordsmith, Alan Root’s enthralling memoir
is the best true-life adventure story to come out of Africa for
years. The final chapter, which describes Root’s last moments with
Joan, I found almost too painful to read (5 star review)
*Daily Telegraph*
This is an entrancing book. Root is a natural story-teller, roaming
East Africa before poachers began to decimate the wildlife. Against
the staggering backdrop of East Africa’s landscape and wildlife,
the darkness of its problems casts a growing shadow over this
book... Luckily, Alan Root’s wonderful films remain, a testimony to
the man of whom David Attenborough once said: ‘He made wild-life
films grow up'
*Daily Mail*
In a riveting memoir, Root offers far more than a few well-work
anecdotes of cute, hand-reared animals who like to sit down to
breakfast with you and curl up on the sofa after dinner...a truly
compelling book, savage and sparkling by turns
*Mail on Sunday*
Root is aware that his magical life has ‘run parallel with a
heartbreaking holocaust, as wildlife conservation has proved to be
a disastrous failure’. This wonderful book can’t put it more
honestly than that. Not only are the current generation of wildlife
film-makers mere pygmies compared to Root, but soon they will not
even be able to attempt matching his documentaries because the
world he captured has ceased to exist.
*Spectator*
If Dame Daphne Sheldrick’s touching and romantic Love, Life, and
Elephants has been climbing the bestseller lists in Britain and
America, Alan Root’s Ivory, Apes and Peacocks is by far the deeper
and more interesting read. The problems that beset Africa’s
wildlife - population pressures, poaching, drought and disease -
are all part of this story, though balanced here by Mr Root’s sense
of fun and adventure
*The Economist*
There is a great sense of life lived to the limit here and great
personal tragedy. A pioneer on the environment and in film-making,
Alan Root does not have a dull word in him. Nature red in tooth and
claw
*Bookseller*
From English birds to the Cape peacock, from elephants to termites,
Alan Root illuminates the lives of animals and the environments
they live in with a very special skill. Years of study and
observation, however passionately followed, do not always go hand
in hand with captivating storytelling. Here they are completely
woven together, also revealing his fascinating, touching, and very
personal life. And he reminds us at the end that “wild places like
the Serengeti will be essential for our spiritual well-being”. Yes,
indeed
*Virginia McKenna*
Alan Root has for half a century made superb wildlife films so
innovative in their photography and script that they set new high
standards. Filmmaker, naturalist, and adventurer, Alan Root has
written a delightful memoir with the verve of a true raconteur,
whether being bitten by a mountain gorilla or flying over Mt.
Kilimanjaro in a balloon. This book is a must-read for anyone
interested in nature films, wildlife, and Africa
*George Schaller*
Brave, crazy, hilarious and lucky - the legendary Root completely
changed our understanding of East Africa and its wildlife
*Nigel Winser, Executive Vice President, The Earthwatch
Institute*
I have long been an admirer of Alan’s work and of his ground-
breaking, outstanding documentaries: and now, in this enthralling,
witty, and deeply moving memoir that cannot be put down, he brings
back a nostalgia for an early days African wilderness that no
longer exists. This book is a must for all who love nature and have
vowed to protect, as I have, the few remaining fragments of natural
world still untarnished by greed
*Kuki Gallmann*
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