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Politics & Social Issues - Fiction, Thrillers, Animals - Fiction, Occupations - Fiction
Black Leopard by Steven Voien β€” book cover

Black Leopard

by Steven Voien
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Overview

David Trowbridge is an American field biologist trying to track the elusive leopard in the rain forest. For the site of his investigation, Trowbridge has chosen an embattled wildlife preserve protected by a testy Belgian primatologist deep in the jungle. Under a dense and dripping canopy of trees, Trowbridge needs to dart and collar six leopards - silent and invisible except when they're attacking chimpanzees, and just possibly a human being who gets in the way. The study is just swinging into gear when three people at the base camp get in the way of something infinitely more vicious than a leopard - something that riddles their bodies with bullets and leaves them to the insects. Trowbridge asks too many questions and is swiftly deported, despite the help of a stunning Lebanese businesswoman. But his work in Terre Diamantee is just beginning - murderers and moneyboys, poachers and politicos, fetichistes and femmes draw him back into a vortex of danger, back into the darkness of the rain forest itself, where his leopards struggle to survive. And where he must draw on all his resources to escape the rainy season, and the erupting country, with his data and his life.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Political thrillers about small African countries are not uncommon, but those that combine politics and wildlife study are rarer creatures; and in the case of Voien's second novel (his first was In a High and Lonely Place), the animals are decidedly more interesting than the people. David Trowbridge, an American field biologist whose specialty is leopards, comes to a research station in a rain forest preserve in a small West African country called Terre Diamante to study their habits in the wild. The station is run by a prickly Belgian primatologist who, soon after David's arrival, is mysteriously murdered, along with two assistants, and David himself only narrowly escapes an ambush. Soon, he finds himself deeply embroiled in the devious politics of the little nation, and despite his efforts to stay out of trouble and complete his leopard research, he and winsome fellow biologist Claire end up running for their lives. The windup is violent and rather perfunctory, as a mixture of magic and diplomatic intervention forestalls an intended coup, and David flies home a crippled and chastened man. The story and characters (including some smoothly sinister African officials) may be rather routine, but what lifts the book above similar efforts is the fascinating and suspenseful material on pursuing leopards and chimps in the wild with all the latest technological resources: solar-powered computer tracking via tiny transmitters implanted in animal collars, night-vision scopes and the like. The atmosphere of Terre Diamante, too, with its mix of modern corruption and ancient sorcery, is beautifully caught. Voien's imagination seems much more involved in the true adventure of contemporary field biology than in his fictional shenanigans, and the reader's attention is likely to follow the same course. (Feb.)

Library Journal

When field biologist David Trowbridge and co-worker Claire complete their groundbreaking study of leopards in a forest in Terre Diamante in West Africa, they find that getting out of the country is not so easy. Civil war has erupted. What's more, someone wants them dead, for David has inadvertently run into a plot by high government officials to steal land from both Terre Diamante and its neighbor to create a new country and sell off the forest, currently protected by World Bank agreements. The biologists overseeing the forest have already been murdered, and more violence is to come. Fascinating information about the leopards and chimpanzees is mixed in with the suspenseful plot. Recommended for popular fiction collections.-Marylaine Block, St. Ambrose Univ. Lib., Davenport, Ia.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 1997
Publisher
Alfred a Knopf
Pages
287
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780679447023

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