Mangroves and Man-Eaters: and Other Wildlife Encounters

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Mangroves and Man-Eaters: and Other Wildlife Encounters Author: Format: Paperback / softback First Published: Published By: Whittles Publishing
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Pages: 244 Illustrations and other contents: 24pp colour section Language: English ISBN: 9781849950091 Categories: , ,

‘ – In this entertaining book, which is as much about people and places as it is about wildlife, you’ll read of hair-raising encounters with giant crabs, lions and killer bees. But rest assured, with Dan Freeman you are travelling with the best of guides – ‘ Extract from Foreword by Tony Soper This is an action-packed book full of anecdotal adventure as the author takes readers on his journeys to find wildlife around the world. As a professional zoologist, his career has taken him to six of the world’s seven continents for research, photography, tourism or film-making. What makes this book really special is that Dan has also written about the people he has taken with him, the people they have encountered and the histories and politics of the countries in which they have worked. Thus, the man-eating tiger story also touches on human poverty and the impact of climate change on Bangladesh; the Australian grasswren story tells how Dan was exploited in his junior role in the Natural History Museum; the African safari covers a terrifying near-death experience with swarming killer bees during the reign of Idi Amin; the giant oak story is set partially in Ukraine, at a time when it was still coming to terms with its new identity following the break-up of the USSR. In ‘Bonding with Spiders’ Dan meets the original James Bond, the bird-eating spider from Dr No and has his own nightmarish encounter in the Australian bush, sharing his tent with a giant spider! Other stories include the battle between young lions and older rivals, filming piranhas in South America, tortoises in France, and wolves, bears and ibex in Italy. And just to show that wildlife drama takes place in our own back gardens, Dan writes about a male blackbird that survived an attack by a neighbour’s cat and then grew up to raise its young under the watchful eye of a local sparrowhawk. Complemented with line drawings by Robin Prytherch, this is a powerful and evocative collection of stories, the result of 45 years engaging with animals and people on six continents. Dan has observed his subjects with a naturalist’s passion for detail, resulting in a book that is engaging, informative and highly revealing. Although some of the creatures would make you want to run a mile, the book will be hard to put down!

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'...is an entertaining book, which relates personal encounters of the author with animals and people around the world'. Mammiferes Sauvages/Arvicola '...his account of his journey from the bird room of the Natural HIstory Museum to these dangerous swamplands - and many other wildlife havens around the globe - is a hugely enjoyable read'. BBC Wildlife '...as the colourful, at times hair-raising, 18 chapters of this book reveal, has travelled very widely over 35 years... Outstanding among the bird stories related is an expedition to northern Australia in 1968 when interest was focused on three species of grasswrens... ...delightful accounts of observing and filming breeding Red-footed Falcons...' IBIS '...What makes his book ... really special is the initimate tone with which Dan writes about the people... ...this is a powerful and evocative collection of stories ... engaging with animals and people on six continents. Dan has observed his subjects with a naturalist's passion for detail, resulting in a book that is engaging, informative and highly revealing'. Australian Geographic '...Freeman's adventures are no less fascinating than those of his more famous small-screen counterparts. ...a remarkable account of the problems involved in filming the feeding frenzies of piranha in Venezuela's Orinoco River. Freeman is an entertaining writer who tells his stories with simplicity and panache and this is an interesting insight into a life spent observing and recording the natural world. The Sydney Morning Herald