An award-winning documentary filmmaker, Sooyong Park has devoted over twenty years to studying and filming Siberian tigers. A film about him, Siberian Tiger Quest, aired on PBS and won Best Cinematography (a tie) at the 2013 International Wildlife Film Festival. He lives in Seoul, Korea.
John Vaillant's work has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, and National Geographic among other magazines. His books, The Tiger and The Golden Spruce, were international bestsellers. His most recent book, The Jaguar's Children is his first novel. He lives in Vancouver.
Great Soul of Siberia: Passion, Obsession, and One Man's Quest for the World's Most Elusive Tiger
eBook
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ISBN-13:
9781771641142
- Publisher: Greystone Books
- Publication date: 09/26/2015
- Sold by: Barnes & Noble
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 340
- Sales rank: 252,092
- File size: 3 MB
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In The Great Soul of Siberia, renowned tiger researcher Sooyong Park tracks three generations of Siberian tigers living in remote southeastern Russia. Reminiscent of the way Timothy Treadwell (the so-called Grizzly Man) immersed himself in the lives of bears, Park sets up underground bunkers to observe the tigers, living thrillingly close to these beautiful but dangerous apex predators. At the same time, he draws from twenty years of experience and research to focus on the Siberian tigers’ losing battle against poaching and diminishing habitat. Over the two years of his harrowing stakeout, Park’s poignant and poetic observations of the tigers draw a fiercely compassionate portrait of these elusive, endangered creatures.
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"Sooyong’s magical prose led me into little-known and breathtakingly beautiful forests, exposed me to the bitter cold of long winter months, and revealed the secret life of that most mysterious of cats, the Siberian tiger."Jane Goodall
"An astonishingly intimate peek into a family of the greatest of cats, and a man in love with watching them. Sooyong Park has felt the breath of a wild Siberian Tiger on his cheek, and so will you." Will Stolzenburg, author of Where the Wild Things Were
"... a remarkable, and heart-rending story written by a poet whose own soul permeates each page." Heather Dune Macadam, author of Rena's Promise: A Story of Sisters in Auschwitz
"A beautiful book, and the best account of Siberian tigers I’ve read. Park’s remarkable first-hand observations of a wild tiger family contain the wisdom of his years of experience and are written with great verve, intelligence, dedication, and understanding." Jeffrey Masson, author of Beasts and When Elephant's Weep
"A beautifully patient, deep-textured exploration of an unknown part of the world and its ancient guardian, the majestic Amur tiger, by a wonderfully empathetic naturalist." Ruth Padel, author of Tigers in Red Weather
"To read Great Soul of Siberia is to go deep into the tiger’s mysterious Russian realm with an expert guide. Thanks to author Sooyong Park’s vivid prose, you will feel extremes of cold and fear, triumph and heartbreak. And you will be helpless against falling in love, as he did, with the tiger’s wild magnificence.J.A. Mills Author ofBlood of the Tiger
"This book is an unbelievably gripping account of one man's laser-focused determination to find, film, and understand one of the rarest and most formidable cats on earth. Not only is Sooyong Park's story astonishingit's also shared with such intense emotion that you feel you're right there with him." Chris Morgan, Ecologist, host of PBS Siberian Tiger Quest
"A heartfelt memoir that reflects the author’s respect and love for a wild and pitiless world."Kirkus Reviews
"The rigour and sincerity of [Park's] philosophy distinguishes The Great Soul of Siberia even in the present age of Emerson-inflected transcendentalist nature writing. ...Park’s close engagement with the forest ecology is the most extraordinary element of this remarkable book."New Statesman
A memoir from a researcher who tracks rare and elusive wild beasts. Documentary filmmaker Park has been studying Siberian tigers for more than 20 years, following their traces across nature reserves and spending frigid winter months in underground earthen bunkers, his camera trained on the snow-covered landscape. In evocative prose, the author recounts his search for several of these naturally secretive animals: a female he named Bloody Mary and her cubs, whose territory covered more than 500 square kilometers of treacherous terrain. As he sadly notes, Siberian tigers are threatened with extinction by poachers, who can get more than $30,000 for a wild animal. A population that was once 10,000 is now merely 350; at the same time, the number of indigenous Ussuri also has been reduced from several hundred thousand to 10,000, a woeful decimation of culture. Hunters, fishers, and root-gatherers, the Ussuri, Park writes, "see this world as a place where spirits pass through eternal cycles," where "everything in the world is a living thing that gives and receives energy." Their animistic beliefs lead them to feel a special bond with birches and willows and to worship tigers; they call the strongest male tiger the Great King. Tracing prints, claw marks, urine markers, droppings, and the remains of prey, Park closes in on Bloody Mary. But tigers, he knows, are crafty and smart. "They figure out human intentions based on behavior, expressions, and the energy radiated by people and take precautions or even attack accordingly," he writes. They can distinguish between an herb collector's satchel and a hunter's rifle, between the smell of cigarettes or cosmetics. Living in solitary confinement during the brutal winter months, waiting patiently for Bloody Mary to appear, Park felt he had gained access to "the intimate depths of nature," and he shares this intimacy with readers. A heartfelt memoir that reflects the author's respect and love for a wild and pitiless world.