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A Primate's Memoir: A Neuroscientist's Unconventional Life Among the Baboons by Robert M. Sapolsky
joanalino's review against another edition
adventurous
emotional
hopeful
informative
inspiring
reflective
medium-paced
5.0
kirbywrites's review against another edition
adventurous
challenging
emotional
funny
informative
inspiring
reflective
sad
slow-paced
4.5
lakemoonlo's review
4.0
I really enjoyed this! Written in such an interesting and entertaining way. The travel stories are incredible and I cried at the end. Love you, Benjamin šµš«°š¼
rachel_juliane's review against another edition
emotional
funny
informative
inspiring
reflective
medium-paced
4.75
gdp60's review
5.0
Wow! An amazing memoir. Very unique "insider" look into africa and Kenya. Interesting to learn about baboons, but also Masai people and culture. Loved the casual storytelling voice he used.
kandicez's review
adventurous
emotional
funny
hopeful
informative
inspiring
sad
slow-paced
5.0
I know we are only one month in, but this is my favorite book of the year so far, and I think it could last. This was at turns funny, heartbreaking, enlightening, and because it inspired a deep dive into Sapolsky in general, incredibly informative.
This outlines a few decades of Sapolsky's summers in the field studying a troop of olive baboons. He starts with his first year and ends with a tragedy. A tragedy that in hindsight is small, but as I read I was heartbroken.
Sapolsky is a neuroendocrinelogist, and believes that there is no free will. He believes that hormones, ancestry, genes, any number of things, predetermine our actions and reactions. There is a sense of comfort to be found in the theory, although I don't quite believe it myself.
This outlines a few decades of Sapolsky's summers in the field studying a troop of olive baboons. He starts with his first year and ends with a tragedy. A tragedy that in hindsight is small, but as I read I was heartbroken.
Sapolsky is a neuroendocrinelogist, and believes that there is no free will. He believes that hormones, ancestry, genes, any number of things, predetermine our actions and reactions. There is a sense of comfort to be found in the theory, although I don't quite believe it myself.
kevin_shepherd's review
5.0
āIf you live in a baboon troop in the Serengeti, you only have to work three hours a day for your calories, and predators don't mess with you much. What that means is you've got nine hours of free time every day to devote to generating psychological stress toward other animals in your troop. So the baboon is a wonderful model for living well enough and long enough to pay the price for all the social-stressor nonsense that they create for each other. They're just like us: They're not getting done in by predators and famines, they're getting done in by each other.ā -RS
An enormous percentage of baboon aggression consists of a pissed-off baboon taking out his frustrations on an innocent bystander. They are, at once, desperately dependent on each other and generally horrible to each other. In other words, they are the perfect stand-in for us. Thatās why Robert Sapolsky, a brilliant but surprisingly gullible grad student, chose to study baboons for his thesis on blood born stress hormones.
About a hundred pages in I was convinced that this book was going to be a huge disappointment. I had wrongly assumed that this would be an in-depth study, Ć la Jane Goodall or Dian Fosse, on baboon societies and social orders. I should have gleaned from the title that the āprimateā in A Primateās Memoir is, in fact, Robert Sapolsky; I should have noticed that the subtitle, A Neuroscientistās Unconventional Life Among the Baboons, plainly states āNEUROSCIENTISTā and not ābehavioralistā or āprimatologist.ā I simply wasnāt paying attention.
All my misgivings were in error. Young Sapolsky may be a lot of thingsāquirky, naive, gullible (I said that already but it bears repeating), inordinately empathetic (hence the gullibility)ābut heās NOT disappointing. Sure, baboons and baboon hierarchies are only about 50% (my generous estimate) of this book, but the rest is a phenomenal telling of one manās transformation from concerned spectator to passionate activist. This turned out to be one of the most moving things Iāve read all year. Five stars.
__________________________________
*Itās worth noting the anti-travelogue essence of the authorās experiences. The East Africa of Primateās Memoir is dangerous and corrupt and full of humanoid shysters and thieves and con artists. Sapolsky put me off Kenya the way Midnight Express put me off Turkey. Iām not visiting either anytime soon.
An enormous percentage of baboon aggression consists of a pissed-off baboon taking out his frustrations on an innocent bystander. They are, at once, desperately dependent on each other and generally horrible to each other. In other words, they are the perfect stand-in for us. Thatās why Robert Sapolsky, a brilliant but surprisingly gullible grad student, chose to study baboons for his thesis on blood born stress hormones.
About a hundred pages in I was convinced that this book was going to be a huge disappointment. I had wrongly assumed that this would be an in-depth study, Ć la Jane Goodall or Dian Fosse, on baboon societies and social orders. I should have gleaned from the title that the āprimateā in A Primateās Memoir is, in fact, Robert Sapolsky; I should have noticed that the subtitle, A Neuroscientistās Unconventional Life Among the Baboons, plainly states āNEUROSCIENTISTā and not ābehavioralistā or āprimatologist.ā I simply wasnāt paying attention.
All my misgivings were in error. Young Sapolsky may be a lot of thingsāquirky, naive, gullible (I said that already but it bears repeating), inordinately empathetic (hence the gullibility)ābut heās NOT disappointing. Sure, baboons and baboon hierarchies are only about 50% (my generous estimate) of this book, but the rest is a phenomenal telling of one manās transformation from concerned spectator to passionate activist. This turned out to be one of the most moving things Iāve read all year. Five stars.
__________________________________
*Itās worth noting the anti-travelogue essence of the authorās experiences. The East Africa of Primateās Memoir is dangerous and corrupt and full of humanoid shysters and thieves and con artists. Sapolsky put me off Kenya the way Midnight Express put me off Turkey. Iām not visiting either anytime soon.
missyreads's review against another edition
informative
4.0
Sapolsky shares some fun stories from his time researching baboons in Africa. A bit of humor mixed in with the science and cultural observations.
andrewgraphics's review against another edition
4.0
Entertaining warts-and-all look into the life of a primate researcher/neurologist and his 21 years studying baboons up close and personal.