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1491, New Revelations of Americas Before Columbus  •  Charles C. Mann
HISTORY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 560 PAGES
A thought-provoking, speculative history of the Americas before the arrival of the Europeans. Mann portrays the successes and failures of the complex societies of the Mississippi River, Central Mexico, the Andes and the Amazon. (WLD61, $15.95)
  1491, New Revelations of Americas Before Columbus
Amazon Insects - A Photo Guide  •  James L. Castner
FIELD GUIDE •  2000 •  PAPER  • 160 PAGES
A guide to spectacular, weird, and commonly encountered insects of the Amazon basin. Geared for the traveler, this handy book features 200 color photographs. Each species gets a handsome portrait, and accompanying text, including a brief description in Spanish. The diversity of bugs, butterflies, katydids, leafhoppers, ants, bees, spiders and other brilliantly colored and camouflaged species in the Amazon basin is astounding. This book presents some personal favorites of the author, and it's quite a bestiary. (AMZ63, $20.00)
  Amazon Insects - A Photo Guide
Amazon Stranger, A Rainforest Chief Battles Big Oil  •  Mike Tidwell
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2000 •  PAPER  • 224 PAGES
Here's an unlikely story, well told. Journalist Tidwell journeyed to the Ecuadorian Amazon, where the local people have successfully battled against Big Oil. The integrity of the Cuyabeno forest and the way of life of the Cofan people have been preserved -- mostly thanks to the savvy of their leader Randy Borman, a white man raised in the jungle by missionaries. Although he ventured to college in the United States, Borman returned to his roots, married a local woman and has raised a family as the chief of this small band of indigenous people. More or less against his better judgement, Tidwell has immersed himself in customs and traditions of the Cofan. His book is a detailed, entertaining portrait of them, the Ecuadorian Amazon, and the Cofan way of life. (AMZ01, $16.95)
  Amazon Stranger, A Rainforest Chief Battles Big Oil
Birds of Ecuador, Vol. 1: Status, Distribution and Taxonomy  •  Paul Greenfield  •  Robert Ridgely
FIELD GUIDE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 848 PAGES
An exhaustively researched, comprehensive reference with detailed species accounts covering distribution and abundance, conservation, taxonomy, and range. Interesting or important species often get a full page. While intended as a reference, serious birders will devour the detailed information on individual species, along with the introductory chapters on habitats and centers of endemism in Ecuador. The 30-page gazetteer covers localities, geographic areas and towns mentioned in the text serves as a guide to where to see birds in Ecuador. Also available as a two-volume set (EDR14) with the gorgeously illustrated Field Guide (EDR08). (EDR07, $85.00)
  Birds of Ecuador, Vol. 1: Status, Distribution and Taxonomy
Cloud Forest, A Chronicle of the South American Wilderness  •  Peter Matthiessen
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1987 •  PAPER  • 280 PAGES • FAVORITE
Matthiessen recounts with wit and insight a 20,000-mile journey through South America, including a marvelous wild goose chase in the Amazon, an obligatory visit to Machu Picchu and his travels in Tierra del Fuego. A deceptively straightforward travelogue, this book displays Matthiessen's unflagging sense of humor, great style and unbounded curiosity. (SAM02, $16.00)
  Cloud Forest, A Chronicle of the South American Wilderness
Conquistadors  •  Michael Wood
HISTORY •  2002 •  PAPER  • 288 PAGES
A lively, illustrated account of the Spanish conquest of the New World by the intrepid writer-filmmaker Michael Wood, who traveled in the footsteps of Hernan Cortes, Pizarro and others, often by horse, raft or other original means. It's an excellent introduction to the overwhelming impact of the Spanish in the Americas, wonderfully illustrated with maps, drawings and full color paintings. (SAM48, $22.95)
  Conquistadors
Darwin and the Barnacle, the Story of One Tiny Creature and History's Most Spectacular Scientific Breakthrough  •  Rebecca Stott
NATURAL HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 336 PAGES
In this surprisingly wonderful book, Rebecca Stott tackles Darwin's early and important interest in -- barnacles! Returning from his mind-altering, five-year voyage around the world, Darwin devoted eight years to a systematic study of the perplexing pedunculated cirripedes (showing definitively that they were highly modified custaceans), both winning the respect of fellow researchers and setting the groundwork for his ideas about evolution through natural selection. Stott pleasurably interweaves biography and science, capturing Darwin's love of nature. (NAT65, $14.95)
  Darwin and the Barnacle, the Story of One Tiny Creature and History's Most Spectacular Scientific Breakthrough
Edge of the Jungle  •  William Beebe
EXPLORATION •  2001 •  PAPER  • 303 PAGES
A collection of 12 essays on the Amazon and its ecology and wildlife. A scientist-explorer with the soul of a poet, Beebe wrote dozens of books about his adventures in tropical America. This book, originally published in 1921, dates from his time as director of the New York Zoological Society's research center in Guyana. (AMZ75, $17.95)
 
The Enchanted Amazon Rain Forest, Stories from a Vanishing World  •  Nigel J.H. Smith
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1996 •  HARD COVER  • 208 PAGES
A wonderfully presented collection of observations from the Amazon, this is a good introduction to the people, culture and geography of the rain forest. Written by a professor of geography, it incorporates anthropology, biology and photographs. (AMZ26, $29.95)
  The Enchanted Amazon Rain Forest, Stories from a Vanishing World
Evolution, The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory  •  Edward Larson
NATURAL HISTORY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 368 PAGES
Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and historian Edward Larson examines the multifaceted history of the scientific theory which has had such an impact on twentieth century thought. Larson begins his study before Darwin, with the scientific breakthroughs of the French Revolution, and then examines Darwin's work and its effects, from the age of Social Darwinism up to present day genetics and evolutionary studies. He focuses on the social and political controversies that have surrounded evolutionary theory, particularly in the United States. (NAT64, $14.95)
  Evolution, The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory
Evolution, The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory  •  Edward Larson
NATURAL HISTORY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 368 PAGES
Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and historian Edward Larson examines the multifaceted history of the scientific theory which has had such an impact on twentieth century thought. Larson begins his study before Darwin, with the scientific breakthroughs of the French Revolution, and then examines Darwin's work and its effects, from the age of Social Darwinism up to present day genetics and evolutionary studies. He focuses on the social and political controversies that have surrounded evolutionary theory, particularly in the United States. (NAT64, $14.95)
  Evolution, The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory
Exploration of the Valley of the Amazon  •  William Herndon  •  Gary Kinder
EXPLORATION •  2000 •  PAPER  • 343 PAGES
An original account of 19th-century exploration of the Amazon by Captain William Lewis Herndon, who traveled from Lima to the Pacific coast of Brazil for the United States government in 1851-1852. A best seller in its day. (AMZ67, $14.00)
  Exploration of the Valley of the Amazon
Explorers of the Amazon  •  Anthony Smith
EXPLORATION •  1994 •  PAPER  • 344 PAGES
In this well told overview of the region, Anthony Smith presents a history of exploration of the Amazon, scientific and otherwise. His tales of adventure, discovery, exploitation, murder and mayhem feature Francisco de Orellana, Baron von Humboldt and seven other European colonizers and scientists. (AMZ31, $32.50)
  Explorers of the Amazon
A Field Guide to Medicinal and Useful Plants of the Upper Amazon  •  James L. Castner  •  Stephen L. Timme  •  James A. Duke
FIELD GUIDE •  1998 •  PAPER  • 154 PAGES
This photographic guide to identification focuses on the practical uses of common plants of the tropical forest. Many of the 120 species illustrated and described grow along the Medicinal Plant Trail at ACEER outside Iquitos. (AMZ39, $38.00)
  A Field Guide to Medicinal and Useful Plants of the Upper Amazon
A Field Guide to the Birds of Peru  •  James Clements  •  Noam Shany  •  Dana Gardner  •  Eustace Barnes
FIELD GUIDE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 283 PAGES
A comprehensive field guide to the birds of Peru with color plates by Eustace Barnes and Dana Gardner illustrating almost 1,800 species. It covers the diversity of birds and habitats from the Amazon to Andes and Pacific coast. Admirably compact, short descriptions of each species focus on identification, habitat and distribution. With a gazetteer of localities and both English and Spanish names. You can preview (and buy) examples of the color plates at the artist's website: gardnerbirds.com. (PRU21, $60.00)
  A Field Guide to the Birds of Peru
Galápagos Islands Coloring Book  •  Jan Sovak
NATURAL HISTORY •  2006 •  PAPER  • 32 PAGES • YOUNG READERS (Age 4-8)
Featuring 32 illustrations of the plants and animals of the Galápagos, Charles Darwin and a map of the archipelago, all ready to color. (GPS74, $3.95)
  Galápagos Islands Coloring Book
The Green Pharmacy  •  James A. Duke
NATURAL HISTORY •  1999 •  PAPER  • 507 PAGES
An A to Z catalog of ailments and the herbal remedies that heal them. Full of facts on the ecology and traditional uses of medicinal plants by a leading ethnobotanist who has conducted much of his research in the Upper Amazon of Peru. Each chapter begins with an anecdote of an encounter with a patient and leads to easy "how-to" instructions for treating the health condition. The chapters cover minor and serious complaints, ranging from bad breath to depression, high cholesterol to wrinkles, morning sickness to viral infections. (AMZ40, $19.95)
  The Green Pharmacy
A Guide to the Birds of Colombia  •  Steven Hilty  •  William Brown
FIELD GUIDE •  1986 •  PAPER  • 836 PAGES
A classic South American bird guide with good coverage of the Amazon basin. It features 56 color plates by Guy Tudor, illustrating 1,700 species -- nearly half of all the species of South America. With a short description on the facings edge along with extensive notes and range maps. It may weigh in at almost three pounds but serious birders won't leave home without it -- and you can always have the color plates bound separately for use in the field. (FG14, $67.50)
  A Guide to the Birds of Colombia
In Amazonia, A Natural History  •  Hugh Raffles
NATURAL HISTORY •  2002 •  PAPER  • 302 PAGES
Hughes -- an intriguing, personal guide to the Amazon -- interweaves anecdote, ethnography, the history of exploration, conservation and biology in this engaging overview of the region. He focuses on a small Brazilian riverine community and the transformation of their river over the last 50 years. Make no mistake, this is an academic book chock full of theory but an uncommonly artful, absorbing one. Hughes is a professor of anthropology at the University of California at Santa Cruz. (AMZ85, $25.95)
 
In Search of the Golden Frog  •  Marty Crump
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2000 •  HARD COVER  • 312 PAGES
Crump, a herpetologist, conservationist and mother, tells of her 30 years of field work in Costa Rica, Brazil, Ecuador and Argentina. An entertaining memoir, written with a light touch, it combines the personal with the scientific. (CON18, $27.00)
  In Search of the Golden Frog
The Incas and their Ancestors, The Archaeology of Peru  •  Michael Moseley
ARCHAEOLOGY •  2001 •  PAPER  • 288 PAGES
An outstanding survey of the archaeology of the Inca, Moche and Nasca civilizations. With hundreds of color illustrations and line drawings, it's an in-depth look at the ancient cultures and history of Peru. The best general introduction to the subject. (AND06, $33.95)
  The Incas and their Ancestors, The Archaeology of Peru
Insight Guide Amazon Wildlife  •  Huw Hennessy  •  Hans-Ulrich Bernard
GUIDEBOOK •  2003 •  PAPER  • 368 PAGES
An illustrated guide to the region, its wildlife and conservation by an international team of biologists and photographers. It covers biogeography, habitats, animal groups and conservation problems in a series of short essays. Several chapters are devoted to the people of the region and to a country-by-country survey of the river's features. It also includes some practical travel information and a short checklist of mammals and birds. (AMZ03, $22.95)
  Insight Guide Amazon Wildlife
Jungle Travel and Survival  •  John Walden, M.D.
GUIDEBOOK •  2001 •  PAPER  • 198 PAGES
Not just for the paranoid traveler or wild adventurer, medical doctor and frequent Amazon-traveler Walden provides useful advice on avoiding malaria, parasites (internal and external), poisonous and otherwise dangerous animals, getting along with the locals, dehydration and much more in this compact guide. (AMZ73, $18.95)
  Jungle Travel and Survival
A Land of Ghosts, The Braided Lives of People and the Forest in Far Western Amazonia  •  David Campbell
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2007 •  PAPER  • 260 PAGES
This, the long-awaited sequel to Campbell's Crystal Desert, finds our scientist-hero not in the Antarctic but rather far up the Amazon not only with a paddle but also with an eccentric coterie of fellow biologists and locals. Campbell writes with flair and insight of the people, history and ecological discoveries in the far western reaches of the Amazon Basin, a place where he has focused much of his work. A tropical ecologist who has a way with words, Campbell has eight permanent study sites in the Brazilian Amazon. (AMZ90, $18.95)
  A Land of Ghosts, The Braided Lives of People and the Forest in Far Western Amazonia
Life in the Treetops, Adventures of a Woman in Field Biology  •  Margaret Lowman
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2000 •  PAPER  • 219 PAGES
The sprightly memoir of a biologist who, with her feet planted firmly on the ground, took to the trees in 1979. A pioneer in the ecology of forest tree canopies, Meg Lowman climbs, studies and sleeps in trees for a living. She's also a popular lecturer on trips to the Amazon and Director of Research and Conservation at Selby Botanical Gardens in Sarasota. She's remarkably frank in this engaging memoir about balancing her multiple roles as as scientist, woman, wife and mom. (AMZ57, $13.95)
  Life in the Treetops, Adventures of a Woman in Field Biology
The Mapmaker's Wife  •  Robert Whitaker
HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 353 PAGES
A harrowing tale of the 18th-century European exploration of the Amazon and one woman's quest to reunite with her scientist husband deep in the uncharted jungle. Colonial politics, the travails of the cartographer, and good old-fashioned murder all add intrigue to the proceedings. (AMZ97, $13.00)
  The Mapmaker's Wife
Margaret Mee's Amazon, Diaries of an Artist Explorer  •  Margaret Mee
NATURAL HISTORY •  2004 •  HARD COVER  • 300 PAGES
A handsome edition of the diaries, paintings and sketchbooks of the remarkable British botanist and painter Margaret Mee (1909-1988). Not just a terrific botanical illustrator, Mee was an intrepid traveler and collector who made 15 expeditions into the Amazon. Orgnized by expedition, the book features 250 botanical and other illustrations, along with a selection of photographs. This new edition published by Antique Collectors' Club in cooperation with Kew Gardens. (AMZ86, $59.50)
  Margaret Mee's Amazon, Diaries of an Artist Explorer
Marine Life of the Galapagos  •  Pierre Constant
FIELD GUIDE •  2006 •  PAPER  • 307 PAGES
Subtitled "A Diver's Guide to the Fishes, Whales, Dolphins and Other Marine Animals," this compact Odyssey Guide features 288 color photographs of fish and invertebrates, maps, plans and dive information. Most of the book is devoted to color plates (grouped in sections) and one-paragraph, shorthand descriptions with identification information, behavior and range. (GPS56, $24.95)
  Marine Life of the Galapagos
Master and Commander, The Far Side of the World  •  Peter Weir
LITERATURE •  2003 •  DVD
Peter Weir's exciting adaptation of two of Patrick O'Brian's popular novels, "Master and Commander" and "The Far Side of the World," starring Russell Crowe and Paul Bettany. Crowe is Captain Jack Aubrey, whose British ship, the HMS Surprise, is battling a mysterious French ship off the coast of Cape Horn during the Napoleonic Wars of 1805. An extended sequenced filmed on the Galapagos marks one of the first times the islands have been depicted in a feature film. (GPS66, $39.98)
 
The Naturalist on the River Amazons  •  Henry W. Bates
EXPLORATION •  1987 •  PAPER  • 420 PAGES
A spell-binding early account of the river and its environs, first published in 1863. A talented naturalist himself, Bates accompanied Alfred Russel Wallace on a collecting expedition for the British Museum in 1848. He stayed on for 11 years, traveling throughout the region. This classic chronicle of his adventures, part natural history and part travelogue, has inspired generations of tropical biologists. Darwin liked it too. (AMZ07, $24.95)
  The Naturalist on the River Amazons
One River, Explorations and Discoveries in the Amazon  •  Wade Davis
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1997 •  PAPER  • 537 PAGES
Wade Davis has written a lyrical, meticulously researched book of discovery. One River is both a biography of his mentor, the director of the Harvard botanical museum Richard Schultes, and the story of his own botanical adventures throughout South America with colleague Tim Plowman. It's a sprawling tale of explorers, botanical secrets, and larger-than-life personalities. This unconventional book is, in part, a testimonial to Schultes, a legendary teacher and explorer who single-handedly created the discipline of ethnobotany. More than that, it's a magnificently written chronicle of five decades of botanical exploration (including some pretty wild experiments with native hallucinogens). (AMZ22, $17.00)
  One River, Explorations and Discoveries in the Amazon
Pimsleur Quick & Simple Spanish  •  Pimsleur Language Method
LANGUAGE & PHRASEBOOKS •  2005 •  AUDIO CD
Four audio CDs with eight 30-minute lessons in basic Spanish, covering elementary vocabulary and phrases used in travel and everyday situations. The Pimsleur method emphasizes the use of listening skills without reading materials (so there isn't a book to follow along). It's advertised as "Totally audio: hear it, learn it, speak it." (SPN257, $19.95)
  Pimsleur Quick & Simple Spanish
Plant Diversity of an Andean Cloud Forest, Inventory of the Vascular Flora of Maquipucuna Ecuador  •  Robert Rhode  •  Grady Webster
REFERENCE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 228 PAGES
A checklist of the flora of Maquipucana reserve with additional information on floristic communities, elevational ranges and distribution of epiphytes. With a map and a few black-and-white photographs. Beware, this is not a field guide but rather an annotated inventory of the 1,650 plant species identified in the reserve by the team. Volume 82, University of California Publications in Botany. (EDR11, $36.00)
 
Quito Map  •  ITMB
2000 •  MAP
A full color map of Quito and surroundings for the traveler, at a scale of 1:12,500. (EDR10, $8.95)
  Quito Map
Reptiles and Amphibians of the Amazon  •  R.D. Bartlett  •  Patricia Bartlett
FIELD GUIDE •  2003 •  PAPER  • 448 PAGES
A convenient guide to 250 colorful and commonly encountered snakes, lizards, turtles, frogs and salamanders of the Amazon Basin, each with clear color photographs and descriptive information. The Bartlett team, who lead trips to the Amazon, has written a series of book on the care of herps as well as a guide to the reptiles and amphibians of Florida. (AMZ84, $29.95)
  Reptiles and Amphibians of the Amazon
Requiem for Nature  •  John Terborgh
NATURAL HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 248 PAGES • FAVORITE
A passionate and thoughtful plea for conservation of the rain forest from a noted biologist. John Terborgh's view of the fate of the rain forest, threatened by constant economic demands, can be quite dismal, but his informed arguments and his unwavering devotion to biodiversity are more than welcome. With a new preface by the author. (FST07, $29.50)
  Requiem for Nature
Rough Guide Ecuador  •  Harry Ades  •  Melissa Graham
GUIDEBOOK •  2007 •  PAPER  • 583 PAGES
A compact comprehensive guide to travel in Ecuador, including Quito, the Oriente and Galapagos with extensive listings, dozens of sketch maps, and a brief overview of culture, nature and history. Second edition. (EDR06, $21.99)
  Rough Guide Ecuador
Running the Amazon  •  Joe Kane
EXPLORATION •  1990 •  PAPER  • 278 PAGES
A best-selling account of a 4,000-mile Amazon expedition from high in the Peruvian Andes to the Atlantic by foot, raft and kayak. It's a tale of high adventure, corrupt border guards, itinerant drug smugglers -- and the camaraderie that develops from a difficult job well done. Only four of the original ten participants finished the journey. Much of the story takes place in the little-explored narrow canyons and rapids high above Iquitos in Peru in the headwaters of the Amazon. (AMZ13, $14.00)
  Running the Amazon
Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest  •  Matthew Restall
HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 272 PAGES
In this provocative book, Restall tackles Columbus, Cortes, Pizarro and the misconceptions surrounding them. The conquisadores most certainly did not conquer the Americas with a handful of men, nor were they received as gods. (SAM52, $19.99)
 
The Smithsonian Atlas of the Amazon  •  Michael Goulding  •  Ronaldo Barthem  •  Efrem Ferreira
NATURAL HISTORY •  2003 •  HARD COVER  • 254 PAGES
An illustrated atlas of the 4000-mile-long river, including its major tributaries, with 150 full color maps and 300 photographs. Michael Goulding (Floods of Fortune) and Brazilian biologists Ronaldo Barthem and Efrem Ferreira provide the accompanying text. Organized geographically, with chapters on major tributaries and drainage basins in Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela. (AMZ82, $39.95)
  The Smithsonian Atlas of the Amazon
The Spears of Twilight: Life and Death in the Amazon Jungle  •  Phillipe Descola
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  1996 •  PAPER  • 458 PAGES
Three years among the Jivaro (Achaur) of the Upper Amazon. A student of Claude Levi-Strauss, Descola proves himself to be an intelligent observer and born storyteller in this ethnographic account. (AMZ25, $24.95)
  The Spears of Twilight: Life and Death in the Amazon Jungle
Stolen Continents, 500 Years of Conquest and Resistance in the Americas  •  Ronald Wright
HISTORY •  2004 •  PAPER  • 464 PAGES
A powerful history of imperialism and resistance in the Americas, with a focus on the Aztec, Maya, Inca, Cherokee and Iroquois. Wright's illuminating account, told largely from the point of view of the losers, details the rapid collapse of cultures and societies in the Americas following the arrival of the Europeans in 1492. Wright draws on an impressive range of archival material in reconstructing this classic account, originally published in 1993. Wright is also the author of Time Among the Maya. (NAM20, $17.00)
  Stolen Continents, 500 Years of Conquest and Resistance in the Americas
Tales of a Shaman's Apprentice  •  Mark Plotkin
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1994 •  PAPER  • 328 PAGES • FAVORITE
This is the stuff of adventure movies. Like Russ Mittermeir and Wade Davis, Mark Plotkin is the student of the extraordinary Richard Schultes at Harvard University, a pioneer in the field of ethnobotany. In this marvelous book Plotkin recounts his work documenting the use of medicinal plants among remote tribes in the Northwest Amazon of Suriname, Venezuela, Guyana and French Guiana. The book is a portrait of people and their environment, a tale of adventure and -- most of all -- a moving example of science in the service of preservation. He reminds us, "every time a shaman dies, it is as if a library burned down." (AMZ15, $16.00)
  Tales of a Shaman's Apprentice
Traveling with Che Guevara, The Making of a Revolutionary  •  Alberto Granado  •  Lucia Alvarez de Toledo
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2004 •  PAPER  • 240 PAGES
This is Alberto Granado's companion book to Che Guevara's well-known Motorcycle Diaries (and one of the sources for the movie). It's Granado's own account of travels with Che via motorbike through Argentina, Chile, Peru, Colombia, and Venezuela. (SAM68, $14.95)
  Traveling with Che Guevara, The Making of a Revolutionary
Trekking and Climbing in the Andes  •  Val Pitkethly  •  Kate Harper
GUIDEBOOK •  2009 •  PAPER  • 192 PAGES
A compact guide to 26 treks and 18 climbing peaks in Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina. With 110 color photos and 60 maps. (AND34, $20.00)
  Trekking and Climbing in the Andes
Vine of the Soul, Medicine Men, Their Plants, and Rituals in the Colombian Amazon  •  Richard Evans Schultes  •  Robert F. Raffauf
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2004 •  PAPER  • 282 PAGES
Written by Schultes, the father of ethnobotany, with a colleague, this book features 150 photographs along with a detailed and authoritative text describing the many uses of plant substances. (AMZ59, $29.95)
  Vine of the Soul, Medicine Men, Their Plants, and Rituals in the Colombian Amazon
Volcanoes, Crucibles of Change  •  Richard Fisher
NATURAL HISTORY •  1998 •  PAPER  • 344 PAGES
A complete primer for the volcano lover, this heavily illustrated book covers types of volcanoes and eruptions, worldwide distribution and the physics of their formation. From geysers and fumeroles to pyroclastic eruptions, this book is an excellent guide. With profiles of 40 sites around the world, 125 illustrations -- and a concluding chapter on "The Volcano Traveler." (GEO02, $29.95)
  Volcanoes, Crucibles of Change
Walking the Jungle, An Adventurer's Guide to the Amazon  •  John Coningham
GUIDEBOOK •  2003 •  PAPER  • 246 PAGES
Coningham, an experienced outdoorsman who lives in the Brazilian Amazon, offer down-to-earth advice in this companionable guide. He covers, without braggadocio, all the usual perils, offering common sense advice on avoiding trouble, especially useful for anyone contemplating an extended visit. (AMZ83, $16.95)
  Walking the Jungle, An Adventurer's Guide to the Amazon
Where to Watch Birds in South America  •  Nigel Wheatley
NATURAL HISTORY •  1995 •  PAPER  • 431 PAGES
A compact practical guide to 206 recommended birdwatching sites throughout South America. Organized by country, each site guide includes an introduction, noteworthy species, maps, and directions, checklists. An invaluable handbook for birders. (SAM40, $24.95)
 
White Waters and Black  •  Gordon McCreagh  •  George Schaller
EXPLORATION •  2001 •  PAPER  • 384 PAGES
A classic account of a two-year-long scientific expedition to the Bolivian Amazon, funny, sweet and thrilling. Originally published in 1923. George Schaller provides the appreciative introduction to this new edition. (AMZ70, $16.00)
  White Waters and Black
The World as You Dream It, Shamanistic Teachings from the Amazon and Andes  •  John M. Perkins
RELIGION •  1994 •  PAPER  • 139 PAGES
An activist on behalf of indigenous cultures and founder of the "Earth Dream Alliance", the author provides a personal account of his sometimes hard-to-believe experiences with curanderos (or shamans) in the highlands and Amazon of Ecuador. Whatever your thoughts on the concept a vision quest, the book includes an fascinating account of the author's time with the Shuar people, their rituals and religious ideas. (AMZ46, $12.95)
 
Yanomami, The Fierce Controversy and What We Might Learn from It  •  Robert Borofsky
CULTURAL PORTRAIT •  2005 •  PAPER  • 397 PAGES
A scholarly reader and study of the controversy surrounding anthropological studies of the Yanomami of northern Brazil and neighboring Venezuela. It follows in the wake of Patrick Tierney's best-selling book, Darkness in El Dorado. With Bruce Albert, Ray Hames, Kim Hill, Lêda Leitão Martins, John Peters, and Terence Turner. (SAM67, $22.95)
 

 
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