Book Details
312
September 26, 2021
Width: 6.00 in
Height: 9.00 in
“Adventurer and author Jon Turk’s worldview has been sculpted over the past seven decades by science and shaped by mythology. In this, his proclaimed “final book,” Jon distills hard-earned lessons learned from his larger-than-life experience into the following: the pursuit of happiness is the root of all unhappiness, and the pursuit of happiness is killing the planet. So, where do we go from here?”
—Pat Morrow, mountaineer, filmmaker, photographer, environmental advocate, coauthor of Searching for Tao Canyon
“While tracking lions in Samburu, explorer and lifelong environmentalist Jon Turk is not afraid to ask the Big Questions: if humans have such impressive problem-solving brains, why have we ended up trashing the planet? When did our behaviour start to evolve away from the animals and the natural world, and what has been the cost of that? Whether he is describing the midnight growl of a leopard outside his tent or “interviewing the Earth,” Jon Turk is a gifted storyteller, a wise elder and a fun companion.”
—Marni Jackson, author and editor with the Mountain and Wilderness Writing Program at The Banff Centre
“Tracking Lions, Myth, and Wilderness in Samburu is a call to expand our natural wisdom to transform the way we experience life, as individuals and as communities. What I love about Jon’s message is its simplicity. The fact that stories have both united and separated us for ages is very clear, but what we don’t see is that stories are the realm of our ‘think-too-much-know-it-all brains’ as Jon likes to say. However, he suggests there is another obvious way of experiencing life that recognizes that there is no separation between you, me, and the natural world. This is a must-read book for anyone who is ready to explore the magic of true living!”
—Valeria Teles, podcaster, blogger, healing coach, author of Inner Peace and Clarity, Fit for Joy and What Is Love?
“Jon Turk is one of our most articulate and courageous writer-adventurers. On this journey to the Samburu people and the lion-savannahs of Africa, he guides us on an intellectual probing of our deep human past in an attempt to understand our planet’s future. Bravely curious, he explores the proto-consciousness that grows from living in the moment, on the edge of survival, like our ancestral hunting-and-gathering forebears. Reading Tracking Lions, you’ll think about human interaction with the natural world in ways you haven’t before.”
—Peter Stark, author of At the Mercy of the River: An Exploration of the Last African Wilderness, Young Washington: How Wilderness and War Forged America’s Founding Father, and the New York Times bestseller Astoria
“With his trenchant powers of observation, Jon Turk has steered kayaks, skis and climbing rack up and down those far-flung destinations most of us will never visit, from Tierra del Fuego to Kamchatka to the Canadian Arctic, and now, in his latest work, eastern Africa. His books have always transcended the standard adventure narrative – in inimitable, no-bullshit prose – by taking his readers into the heart of both wilderness and culture. More than just a compelling insight into place and a little-known and olden-day culture, Tracking Lions makes the linkage to what we have lost in our own, troubled, modern society. Jon Turk is as precious as a Samburu warrior.”
—Jonathan Waterman, author of Atlas of the National Parks, In the Shadow of Denali, Chasing Denali, and Arctic Crossing