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Saving the Ghost of the Mountain

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Aug. 31st, 2009 | 05:24 am




SAVING THE GHOST OF THE MOUNTAIN
By Sy Montgomery
Photographs by Nic Bishop
Houghton Mifflin, 2009

Category: Middle-grade Nonfiction



My kids like to joke that I could never write the sorts of books Sy Montgomery writes … and they may be right. SNAKE SCIENTIST? Um, no thanks. TARANTULA SCIENTIST? I don’t exactly love hairy spiders. QUEST FOR THE TREE KANGAROO? I thought so for a moment or two, but then I noticed a blood-sucking cloud forest leech attached to a human arm, quite possibly the author's human arm, in the first chapter. I’m out.

I’m a different sort of adventurer, I guess.

But, oh how I love to imagine Sy and her intrepid partner-in-images, Nic Bishop, as they trek around the planet having crazy exciting and somewhat dangerous adventures, bringing back stories of science and conservation. In SAVING THE GHOST OF THE MOUNTAIN, author and photographer traveled to Mongolia to help track the elusive snow leopard. They climbed up, hiked over, and slid down mountains, searching all the while for leopards and, failing that, leopard scat. The book is irresistible and satisfying, despite the unpredictable nature of those ghostlike cats.

I admire Sy's moxie, but I also admire her sensibilities, as evidenced in these lines, my favorites in the entire book:

Protecting an animal is like loving someone. It’s not something you do and then finish. It’s a long-term promise, honored over and over, one step at a time.”


Amen to that.



For those who don't know, Mondays are reserved for celebrating children's nonfiction in the online kidlit world. You can read more about this celebration here on Anastasia Suen's Picture Book of the Day blog, and you can find a roundup of today's Nonfiction Monday posts here at the SimplyScience Blog.










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Comments {7}

docstymie

(No subject)

from: [info]docstymie
date: Aug. 31st, 2009 11:15 am (UTC)
Link

Did you see the photos that were captured by a camera trap in Afghanistan? Really cool.

http://docudharma.com/diary/15698/amazing-snow-leopard-pictures-from-war-torn-afghanistan

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Loree Griffin Burns

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from: [info]lgburns
date: Aug. 31st, 2009 12:07 pm (UTC)
Link

Oh, those are amazing, Jeff. The scientists in the book used this type of trap camera to try and get footage, but with no luck. I've added your link to my post. (Alas, I couldn't figure how to show you as one of those cute little LJ doohickie thingamabobbers, so a regular link will have to do.)

Thanks for sharing!

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docstymie

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from: [info]docstymie
date: Aug. 31st, 2009 01:08 pm (UTC)
Link

you're welcome! I was looking for a less political link, but that's the only one I could quickly find.

edit: we have the luxury of having a couple of snow leopards in our zoo here. They are so beautiful. When we had Afghan Hounds in the family, I read the legend that in their native Afghanistan the tribes used the hounds to hunt snow leopards because the dogs could run fast enough and navigate the mountainous terrain well enough to "tree" the leopards for the hunters.

The only thing my hounds ever treed was the couch... ;o)

Edited at 2009-08-31 01:11 pm (UTC)

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jeannineatkins

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from: [info]jeannineatkins
date: Aug. 31st, 2009 12:12 pm (UTC)
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Beautiful cover, beautiful quote: this books sounds amazing. Thanks, Loree.

You have adventures enough among the bees. And kids.

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Loree Griffin Burns

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from: [info]lgburns
date: Aug. 31st, 2009 01:59 pm (UTC)
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True enough, Jeannine. I adore my adventures!

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Liza Martz

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from: [info]lizamartz
date: Sep. 1st, 2009 04:24 pm (UTC)
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Give yourself some credit, Loree, I recall you sacrificing your arm for the sake of science by allowing a bee to sting you in a photo shoot.

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Loree Griffin Burns

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from: [info]lgburns
date: Sep. 3rd, 2009 02:01 pm (UTC)
Link

Bee stings are dreamy next to blood-sucking LEECHES!

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