What’s the most interesting thing you learned from a book recently? I admire Rachel Carson, who wrote “Silent Spring,” and Steven Drucker, who spent 11 years researching the dangers of genetically modified food to write “Altered Genes, Twisted Truth.” For a general audience I would also recommend David Quammen (his latest was “Spillover,” about the origin of zoonotic diseases) Peter Wohlleben, who wrote “The Hidden Life of Trees” and Meg Lowman, who wrote “The Arbornaut.” Craig Foster and Ross Frylinck describe a magic world in “Underwater Wild.” Every day up in the mountains at dawn, back at dusk.Īre there researchers or popular science writers you especially admire? What science and nature writers would you recommend for a general audience? I read no books, as I was utterly focused on first finding, then observing the chimpanzees, and in the evening transcribing my field notes. Was reading a big part of your life during the decades that you lived among wild chimpanzees? What books, or what kinds of books, did you read in that period? We need to grow the Fellowship of the Ring to fight the evil forces of autocratic regimes, the swing to the far right, the disrespect of nature that has led to climate change, extinction of species and the pandemic industrial agriculture including the horrendous factory farms - the list is endless. Moreover, the book is like an allegory of the challenges we face in today’s dark times. Tolkien’s “The Lord of the Rings” - the author has created another world that becomes totally real even as the story grips you. His mastery of the different voices of his characters is quite extraordinary. Another audiobook: “Beautiful Ruins,” by Jess Walter. The reader matters - I love Hugh Fraser’s voice. I need something soothing to stop the racing thoughts about all I haven’t managed to accomplish that day and all I have to do the next. Don’t know how long they’ll sit there, though - no time to read them.īy the end of a day of Zooms and Skypes and emails my eyes are too tired to read, so I turn to audiobooks. I skimmed it and it is an extraordinary and chillingly true autobiography.
And “Cult: Following My Escape and Return to the Children of God,” by Bexy Cameron. It is brilliant and I know the author, Imran Ahmad. “The Perfect Gentleman: A Muslim Boy Meets the West,” to remind me to reread. Doctor Dolittle and Tarzan led me to dream about living with animals in Africa.” I read every book about animals I could find.
#AGATHA CHRISTIE AUDIO BOOKS HUGH FRASER YOUTUBE TV#
“There was no TV when I was a child,” says the primatologist Jane Goodall, author (most recently) of “The Book of Hope.” “I learned from books - and nature.