As the Amazon burns, Fábio Zuker shares stories of resistance, self-determination, and kinship with the land.
In 2007, a seven-ton minke whale was found stranded on the banks of the Tapajós River, hundreds of miles into the Amazon rainforest. For days, environmentalists, journalists, and locals followed the lost whale, hoping to guide her back to the ocean, but ultimately proved unable to save her. Ten years later, journalist Fábio Zuker travels to the state of Pará, to the town known as “the place where the whale appeared,” which developers are now eyeing for mining, timber, and soybean cultivation.
In these essays, Zuker shares intimate stories of life in the rainforest and its surrounding cities during an age of raging wildfires, mass migration, populist politics, and increasing deforestation. A group of Venezuelan migrants wait at a bus station in Manaus, looking for someplace more stable than home. In Alenquer, a father mourns the death of his son, poisoned by pesticides from a nearby açai plantation. An elder in Alter do Chão becomes the first Indigenous person in Brazil to die from COVID-19, after years of fighting for the rights and recognition of the Borari people.
The subjects Zuker interviews are often torn between ties with their ancestral territories and the push toward capitalist gains; The Life and Death of a Minke Whale in the Amazon captures the friction between their worlds and the resilience of movements for autonomy, self-definition, and respect for the land that nourishes us.
Fábio Zuker is the author of The Life and Death of a Minke Whale in the Amazon, and a nonfiction writer primarily of essays, columns, and journalism. He holds a master’s degree from Paris’s School for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences and is a PhD candidate in Social Anthropology at the University of São Paulo. As a journalist, he is a frequent contributor to Amazônia Real and Thomson Reuters Foundation, and has written articles for National Geographic, Revista Piauí, Le Monde Diplomatique Brasil, Agência Pública, and Nexo Jornal, among others. He has twice been a Pulitzer Center grantee. In recent years, he has worked specifically with stories of the Amazon rainforest, looking to write “nearby” the people whose land is being destroyed and their approaches to resistance.
Ezra E. Fitz is the translator of The Life and Death of a Minke Whale in the Amazon. He has worked with Grammy-winning musician Juanes, Emmy-winning journalist Jorge Ramos, and the king of soccer himself, Pelé. His translations of contemporary Latin American literature by Alberto Fuguet, Eloy Urroz, and others have been praised by the New York Times, the Washington Post, the New Yorker, and The Believer, among other publications. Fitz has been awarded grants from the Mexican National Fund for Culture and Arts (FONCA). He was a 2010 Resident at the Banff International Literary Translation Centre and a 2019 Peter Taylor Fellow with the Kenyon Review Literary Translation Workshop. He lives with his wife and children in Spring Hill, Tennessee.
As the Amazon burns, Fábio Zuker shares stories of resistance, self-determination, and kinship with the land.
In 2007, a seven-ton minke whale was found stranded on the banks of the Tapajós River, hundreds of miles into the Amazon rainforest. For days, environmentalists, journalists, and locals followed the lost whale, hoping to guide her back to the ocean, but ultimately proved unable to save her. Ten years later, journalist Fábio Zuker travels to the state of Pará, to the town known as “the place where the whale appeared,” which developers are now eyeing for mining, timber, and soybean cultivation.
In these essays, Zuker shares intimate stories of life in the rainforest and its surrounding cities during an age of raging wildfires, mass migration, populist politics, and increasing deforestation. A group of Venezuelan migrants wait at a bus station in Manaus, looking for someplace more stable than home. In Alenquer, a father mourns the death of his son, poisoned by pesticides from a nearby açai plantation. An elder in Alter do Chão becomes the first Indigenous person in Brazil to die from COVID-19, after years of fighting for the rights and recognition of the Borari people.
The subjects Zuker interviews are often torn between ties with their ancestral territories and the push toward capitalist gains; The Life and Death of a Minke Whale in the Amazon captures the friction between their worlds and the resilience of movements for autonomy, self-definition, and respect for the land that nourishes us.
Fábio Zuker is the author of The Life and Death of a Minke Whale in the Amazon, and a nonfiction writer primarily of essays, columns, and journalism. He holds a master’s degree from Paris’s School for Advanced Studies in Social Sciences and is a PhD candidate in Social Anthropology at the University of São Paulo. As a journalist, he is a frequent contributor to Amazônia Real and Thomson Reuters Foundation, and has written articles for National Geographic, Revista Piauí, Le Monde Diplomatique Brasil, Agência Pública, and Nexo Jornal, among others. He has twice been a Pulitzer Center grantee. In recent years, he has worked specifically with stories of the Amazon rainforest, looking to write “nearby” the people whose land is being destroyed and their approaches to resistance.
Ezra E. Fitz is the translator of The Life and Death of a Minke Whale in the Amazon. He has worked with Grammy-winning musician Juanes, Emmy-winning journalist Jorge Ramos, and the king of soccer himself, Pelé. His translations of contemporary Latin American literature by Alberto Fuguet, Eloy Urroz, and others have been praised by the New York Times, the Washington Post, the New Yorker, and The Believer, among other publications. Fitz has been awarded grants from the Mexican National Fund for Culture and Arts (FONCA). He was a 2010 Resident at the Banff International Literary Translation Centre and a 2019 Peter Taylor Fellow with the Kenyon Review Literary Translation Workshop. He lives with his wife and children in Spring Hill, Tennessee.
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Milkweed: TK
Parnassus: https://www.parnassusbooks.net/book/9781571311818
Bookshop: https://bookshop.org/books/the-life-and-death-of-a-minke-whale-in-the-amazon-and-other-stories-of-the-brazilian-rainforest/9781571311818
IndieBound: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9781571311818
Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-life-and-death-of-a-minke-whale-in-the-amazon-f-bio-zuker/1138591045?ean=9781571311818
Books-a-Million: https://www.booksamillion.com/p/Life-Death-Minke-Whale-Amazon/Fbio-Zuker/9781571311818?id=8280304897344
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Life-Death-Minke-Whale-Amazon/dp/1571311815/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=9781571311818&qid=1628542196&sr=8-1