Professor Dame Alison Richard has been the Provost of the University of Yale and the Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. As a researcher, she is widely known for her work and writings on the evolution of complex social systems among primates. This work has taken her to Central America, Northern Pakistan and, in particular, to the forests of Madagascar. Professor Richard has been working in Madagascar since 1970, when she spent 18 months studying the socioecology of sifaka, Propithecus verreauxi, for her PhD. Since 1984, in collaboration with colleagues in Madagascar and the US, her research has focused on the demography and social behaviour of the sifaka population at Beza Mahafaly, Madagascar. In 1975, with colleagues from the University of Antananarivo and Washington University, she launched the Beza Mahafaly partnership for conservation, research and training, and she has been deeply involved in that activity ever since.
'Full of wonder and forensic intelligence, The Sloth Lemur's Song is a love song to the astonishing evolution of Madagascar. It is a fascinating journey from the island's origins to the complex tensions of the present day, with Alison Richard the most considerate and engaging of guides.' Isabella Tree, author of Wilding 'This book is an encyclopedia of wonders, but it's also a riveting story of evolution through time in a land utterly unique. Madagascar is arguably the most amazing place on Earth. Richard knows it as few outsiders ever will, and its praises have never been better sung.' David Quammen, author of Spillover 'Truly mind-blowingly epic ... For every adventure you need a perceptive, intelligent and compassionate guide. Ours is author Alison Richard whose life's work has been Madagascar ... a tale of enchanting and endangered biodiversity' Resurgence and Ecologist '[A] Masterpiece ... Revelatory' Madagascar Conservation & Development 'Brilliant ... This is simply a wonderful book. Richard tells Madagascar's often improbable history with vivid detail and personal story based on her research, all backed up with the latest scientific thinking ... You will enjoy the stories so much you may not notice that your world is expanding.' Cool Green Science blog 'A love story; an ode to Madagascar. Throughout, the author interweaves first-person accounts of her extensive experience as a field biologist, detailed and accurate accounts of the natural history of the island, up-to-the-minute summaries of the latest scientific studies spanning everything from botany to geology to climatology, with the binding 'through line' of the Malagasy people and their relationship to the landscape.' Anne Yoder, Duke University