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J. A. Mills has worked for TRAFFIC, World Wildlife Fund, Conservation International, and Save the Tiger Fund. She is now a consultant to the MacArthur Foundation and lives in Washington, DC.

Œuvres de J. A. Mills

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Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
J.A. Mills began her career as a journalist but did not find her passion until she fell into a story about the plight of Asiatic Bears being farmed for bile and body parts. Mills made a promise to help the bears and was soon working for conservation organizations such as TRAFFIC, the World Wildlife Fund and Conservation International. While working in the field, she was introduced to a similar issue for tigers. Through some daring work, Mills uncovered the full extent of the tiger farming trade in China. After seeing the damage being done to tigers in the wild and on the tiger farms, Mills goes to battle against major forces for this majestic and endangered species.

In this nonfiction memoir, Mills recounts her struggles and triumphs in the international wildlife conservation field. Mills takes us on her exciting, heartfelt and emotional journey into the underbelly of wildlife trade. While I have some knowledge of the wildlife trade, I was not aware of all of the major players and their deep rooted interests in the trade. As Mills dives further into trade, I was surprised at the risks she took in order to find out the truth behind what was going on. I was also surprised at the major players, their motivations and the amount of money animal trade brought in. I admired Mills tactics on befriending some of the players within the trade and getting the people of China on her side. While focused in Asia, Mills also explores a bit of wild animal trade in the USA. In some instances, the USA is contradictory in policy for other countries and what it allows in it's own borders. Mills also visits Carole Baskin's Big Cat Rescue and remarks on the man we know as Joe Exotic. Written six years ago, Blood of the Tiger is just the beginning of the tiger's struggles and what people have done to stop wildlife trade. While there have been significant strides during this time, wildlife trade is unfortunately still an issue. Reading this during COVID creates an even stronger plea to end wildlife trafficking as China's bushmeat trade is the likely cause of the outbreak.

This book was received for free in return for an honest review.
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Signalé
Mishker | 20 autres critiques | Jan 18, 2022 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
An in-depth report of the politics of animal conservation. Much of this was very difficult for me to read, because I can't stand the thought of animals suffering and I find endangered species to be a very depressing topic. It always makes me wish humans didn't exist. I think Mills did a good job showing the nuts and bolts of conservation, how it takes a lot of people from all different countries, backgrounds and walks of life caring a great deal and working very hard together to bring a species back from the brink of extinction, and how many times ego and petty spite get in the way of accomplishing anything. I only hope that in future generations wild tigers will continue to exist as they were meant to.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
meggyweg | 20 autres critiques | Jul 26, 2017 |
As Sy Montgomery so eloquently states, "Blood of the Tiger" may be the most important book you read this year." Most Americans don't seem to know the story of China's massive appetite for eating up endangered species and hoping they go extinct so they can profit hugely. Not all Chinese agree with this, of course, but Asian medicine has been using parts from wild animals for centuries and they don't intend to give it up. Bears, killed for their gallbladders/bile, tigers killed mostly for their bones for making wine and medicine, rhinos and elephants for horns and tusks, sharks for fins for soup. It's astonishing and enraging that the Asian countries participating in poaching of these shrinking wild species continue, despite pressure from the international community. They completely ignore agreements put in place decades ago and have moneyed, stubborn, and effective lobbies that allow massive killing of wildlife in the countries where it exists. They farm bears, tigers, rhinos and other wildlife under deplorable conditions, whetting Asian appetites for products from these animals. However, in all cases, wild animals are preferred -- their parts are thought to be more pure, so poaching not only continues but has ramped up. One day, none of these animals will be left in the wild and that's no exaggeration.

People of the world need to work for these animals and Asians need to work in their own countries to educate people about the connection between what they are consuming and purchasing and the poaching and cruel farming of wild animals. Unbelievably, it seems most Asians don't make that connection. Is that really possible? Yes it is. Tragically, yes it's entirely so.

This book is wonderfully written, concise writing, searchable details and references, and most importantly, ways we can all help at the end. What an amazing person J.A. Mills is, along with many of her colleagues and successors who continue the difficult work of facing the enormous Asian dragon that is eating the world's wildest and most magnificent animals.

The enormity of this problem comes clear in the book. I would urge news agencies to publish more information around the world about this issue, ongoing. Don't give any relief from this issue to those who are annihilating species. It's especially important to note that tiger bones, shark fins, rhino horns, and bear bile has never been proven to cure anything; it's folk medicine, and these cultures are ancient and hold fast to the idea that it has always been done this way.

Bravo to J.A Mills and all who work to correct this situation. Read the book and find out which organizations fight for the lives of these increasingly endangered animals. Read about the world conferences and how the massive dragon keeps getting its way.

This should be required reading in every country. I received this book from Goodreads Giveways.
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Signalé
Rascalstar | 20 autres critiques | Jan 21, 2017 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Is it a memoir or is it a polemic about tiger conservation? Although the author does state "It's not about me", it really is about her. When she's interested in bears and bear gall extraction, we learn about bears. When she becomes interested in tigers, we learn about tigers. When she's depressed, we hear about her depression - not all that much, but it really has nothing to do with tigers. When she leaves the world of tiger-protecting NGOs for several years, we get no news about what happened in her absence except a brief recap to the effect that "When I came back the situation was like this-and-that because such-and-such happened". So, a memoir.

Credit where credit is due, though: she provides a lot of information about tigers and how human greed drives the trade in endangered species. And she apparently paints a vivid word picture. Until I went back to consult the book for this review, I thought there was a photo section in the book, because I could see the vats of tiger-bone wine and the bears restrained for the gall harvest so clearly in my mind's eye. Big props to the author for thoroughly researching the major players in the tiger trade, and more for providing websites to which we can turn for current information about tigers, because if there's one thing that becomes clear throughout the course of the book, it's the volatility and rapid fluctuation of the tigers' situation.
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Signalé
muumi | 20 autres critiques | Jan 11, 2017 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
57
Popularité
#287,973
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
21
ISBN
3

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