In our reading and discussion this year, we have been exploring our understanding of our world, the uses we make of it, our wanderings across it, our settlements on it, our confrontations with the elements and animals that inhabit it, and our confrontations with each other. Our next two books explore what John Vaillant calls the "collisions between human ambition and the natural world."Vaillant says his book was inspired by a documentary about the events in his book, Conflict Tiger, directed by Sasha Snow and shot on location in Russia's Far East in the winter of 2004. Snow is now working on a documentary based on Vaillant's first book, The Golden Spruce: A True Story of Myth, Madness, and Greed, about logging in British Columbia and the felling of a golden spruce sacred to the Haida Indians, that also dramatizes the "collisions between human ambition and the natural world." Visit the Conflict Tiger website to view a clip of the film.
Visit Vaillant's website, http://www.thetigerbook.com/, for links to articles about the Amur tiger and websites of organizations working to prevent poaching and trafficking in Amur tigers.
Simon Winchester suggests we "read this fine, true book in the warmth, beside the flicker of firelight. Read it and be afraid. Be very afraid." We hope you will join the discussion: Tuesday, August 2, at 6:30 p.m. at Main Library; Thursday, August 18, at 11:00 a.m. at West Ashley Branch Library; and here on the blog.