Here’s the Table of Contents for Exposing the Big Game?
Foreword by Captain Paul Watson
Introduction
Chapter 1) Hide-hunting Holocaust Survivors Still under Fire
Chapter 2) An Act of Bison Altruism
Chapter 3) War on Coyotes an Exercise in Futility and Cruelty
Chapter 4) Time to End a Twisted Tradition
Chapter 5) Avian Superstar Both Athlete and Egghead
Chapter 6) From the Brink of Oblivion and Back Again?
Chapter 7) A Day in the Sun for the Hayden Wolves
Chapter 8) Critical Cornerstone of a Crumbling Castle
Chapter 9) Bears Show More Restraint than Ursiphobic Elmers
Chapter 10) The Fall of Autumn’s Envoy
Chapter 11) Inside the Hunter’s Mind
Chapter 12) A Magical World of Oneness
Chapter 13) Living Targets of a Dying Sport
Chapter 14) A Few Words on Ethical Wildlife Photography
In Closing
Acknowledgements:
Looking back, this was not, at the outset, planned as a podium from which to lambaste anyone’s hobby or heritage, but was originally intended as a venue for relating some of the behaviors and capabilities I’d observed among animals living in the wild, and as a celebration of life along the compassion continuum. However, after delving deeper into the histories of the species covered here—thanks in part to the invaluable references listed below—I found it impossible to simply depict their natural activities without also chronicling the shocking stories of abuse they have suffered at the hands of man. It would have been doing the animals a disservice to merely record how they naturally lived without at least alluding to the far-reaching and pervasive ways that human actions have altered their lives and sometimes their very natures. And the facts are clear: there has been no greater direct human impact on wildlife than the ongoing threat of hunting. As with the other pertinent and profound quotes from a variety of enlightened sources, this one from Edward Abbey proficiently puts it in a nutshell, “It is not enough to understand the natural world. The point is to defend and preserve it.”

And we thank you, Jim, for publishing the first unequivocally, and long overdue, anti-hunting book since Cleveland Amory’s classic “ManKind?”.
Wow,
Geoff. That is amazing technology!
I read that for my BA.
Thanks Geoff, and yes, it’s long overdue. People seem to have forgotten what anti-hunting is…
I’ll second that, Geoff!
Thank you both!
Early. I am watching Hurricane Sandy.
You are all Wonderful!
Stay safe. I hope you don’t take the brunt of the hurricane!
It looks bad.
A Colleague (Air Traffic Control) called me.
Everything is “battened down!”
All my Utility Companies called about downed wires.
The Joys of a Flood Plain 🙂
Keep us posted, Danielle!
Another thank you from me, Jim~! You wrote, “I found it impossible to simply depict their natural activities without also chronicling the shocking stories of abuse they have suffered at the hands of man. It would have been doing the animals a disservice to merely record how they naturally lived without at least alluding to the far-reaching and pervasive ways that human actions have altered their lives and sometimes their very natures.” This is also what led me to my current perspective and dismay. I find a lot of birders and photographers who don’t share my views, who accept what is in the way of hunting (as “conservation”) and who don’t even question the paradigm. Perhaps it’s too difficult or threatening, given how entrenched the idea and how marginalized you sometimes become by challenging this norm. I’m so grateful for people like you who’ve taken a strong position for preservation of wildlife (as contrasted with our traditional ideas of “conservation”). Wild animals do, indeed, suffer so much for our deliberate and inadvertent intrusions.
They certainly do, Ingrid. Too bad so many are blind to that fact. Thank you for being of like mind and for truly caring about the animals out there so often depersonalized by those who think of wildlife in terms of an overall population of a species, rather than as sentient indidual Earthlings.
Love = Earth