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Homesick for a World Unknown: The Life of George B. Schaller

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In this riveting portrait of George B. Schaller, the world’s leading field biologist, Miriam Horn captures the seventy years he spent living among wild animals in the world’s remotest regions, forever altering how we see—and save—the natural world

In 1959, at just twenty-six years old, the biologist George B. Schaller shrugged off warnings of mortal danger and set off for the Belgian Congo to do what his peers wouldn’t conduct the first sustained field study of mountain gorillas by living alongside them. Boldly refusing arms and retinue, Schaller and his wife, Kay, established a home in the jungle and came to share the apes’ rhythms and rules. After more than two years of immersive study—a groundbreaking methodology he would spend his life honing—Schaller transformed how the world viewed gorillas; they were not murderous brutes but tender creatures, and more like humans than any twentieth-century scientist had recognized. His mission to revolutionize our perceptions of wild animals would propel him across four continents and inspire generations of scientists.

In Homesick for a World Unknown, Miriam Horn draws on thousands of pages from Schaller’s archives, globe-spanning interviews, and two journeys into the field with the legendary scientist himself, revealing the magnificent life of the man who would become the founding father of modern wildlife conservation. She examines how Schaller’s compulsion to escape into the wilderness came not only from a fearless spirit but a childhood upended by displacement. Born in Berlin in 1933 to an American socialite married to a Nazi diplomat, the young Schaller was moved from one occupied country to another before he finally immigrated with his mother to the US in 1947 as an enemy alien. It was in the woods that teenage George found a place of respite and at the University of Alaska that he found both his calling and a lifelong partner in Kay.

In the decades following his work in the Congo, Schaller went on to conduct the earliest studies of Indian tigers, Serengeti lions, Brazilian jaguars, Chinese pandas, and Tibetan brown bears, meticulously cataloging their private lives. He navigated acute danger and political unrest in pursuit of empathy for and preservation of creatures big and small. It was Schaller who first guided Jane Goodall on her chimp study in Tanzania and led Peter Matthiessen into Nepal in search of the snow leopard. His impact radiated far beyond the scientific He secured protections for vast national parks and partnered with local communities to protect the homes they share with these animals. A vivid and captivating account of the adventurous life of George B. Schaller, here is the definitive portrait of the man who dared to challenge us to rethink our place in the natural world.

640 pages, Hardcover

Published April 21, 2026

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About the author

Miriam Horn

11 books13 followers
Miriam Horn is the author of two previous books, including the New York Times best-selling Earth: The Sequel. She works at Environmental Defense Fund and lives in New York City.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Henry.
205 reviews3 followers
May 23, 2026
3.75 stars.

This was an incredibly thorough account of the life of George Schaller, a naturalist and wildlife ecologist who, through his stubbornness, determination, and capacity for deep listening, revolutionized how we approach conservation biology. At times, it dragged in its own insistence on extraordinary detail, but it reflects Schaller's own tendency to document with painstaking detail, as well as Miriam Horn's research of primary, secondary, and tertiary accounts of his ventures.

Despite my background in environmental conservation, I was unfamiliar with George Schaller until reading this book. I am so thoroughly impressed with him as an individual and with his legacy. I'm cautious to lend such weight to the life and actions of a single person, but truly, he might be one of the most individually impactful people of the 20th century. Born in Nazi Germany to a government bureaucrat (yikes!) and a high-class American woman, he experienced a variety of hardships while growing up distant from his family. He escaped post-war Germany with his father, literally trudging across broken, war-torn landscapes, and developed a familiarity with hardship that became the foundation for his incredibly immersive field experiences.

As a university student, Schaller had his first research experiences in Alaska, where he learned to listen to landscapes and indigenous peoples and came to understand observation was more useful than studying dead animals. For the greater part of the next century, he honed this perspective across continents, working in some incredibly remote locations with poorly-understood and/or incredibly-demonized creatures. He prioritized the needs, conditions, and perspectives of local people over political and scientific establishments, always seeking to find ways to allow tradition to flourish alongside wildlife. He shied away from his own celebrity status, prepared generations of scientists from across the world, empowering them to make changes in their own countries and beyond, and, in refusing to balk before obstinate governments, pushed for the protection of millions of acres of critical wildlife areas. His rustic, immersive methods in wildlife ecology granted him a singularly unique perspective on the titanic changes the world's natural places have experienced since the 1940s, and no one will ever be able to research, experience, and witness as much as he did. He is a singularly unique scientist, and there is a great tragedy to the fact that, for all the good he did, he was not able to stand the death march of capitalist expansionism.

I am so impressed with him as a figure, and I think this biography does a wonderful job of balancing him as a totemic ecologist and as a complex, imperfect human. It is clear that Schaller is an incredibly self-aware and humble person, and Horn captures that well. The book was a long read, but I've found it valuable to read this as I progress deeper into the field of wildlife conservation.


1 review
July 2, 2026
I just finished my one-month daily delve into the world of George Schaller. I was delighted to travel with George before bedtime, looking forward to it each day. Wow, I am thrilled to have made this journey, thanks to you Miriam! What a monumental task you undertook! Thank you for your extraordinary labors to unearth and weave together the details of his life.
I hope George was able to achieve a feeling of satisfaction for his work, but it seems that he never felt that it was finished or good enough. You captured the essence of his spirit. It felt like the old world was slipping through his fingers like sand. He was dashing wildly from country to country, habitat to habitat, trying to hold back this crushing tidal wave of development, ignorance, poverty, poaching, and incompetence. It is miraculous that he achieved so much and was able to persevere against huge barriers. I especially appreciated learning about the young scientists whom he mentored. Your images of him following and observing the animals were cinematic. Your depiction of Kay and their relationship was so sad, oh my! This is a very important book for us to read now, we must not take the progress of recent decades, accomplished by George and many others, for granted.

Profile Image for Pamela.
Author 14 books12 followers
June 24, 2026
Lush in description and in heart biography of a dedicated, incredible man's journey as a field biologist.
182 reviews1 follower
June 26, 2026
One of my all time heroes, and this is a remarkable and insightful story of what he was all about!
101 reviews
Want to Read
May 25, 2026
From the Marginalian: "Considered by many the most effective conservationist of the past century, George Schaller — the first researcher to walk among wild gorillas unarmed and be rewarded with unprecedented insight into their universe, the first to take a photograph of the elusive snow leopard, rigorous and sensitive biographer of the lives of species as varied as the African lion and the Tibetan antelope, and now himself the subject of Miriam Horn’s rigorous and sensitive biography" - https://www.themarginalian.org/2026/0...
Profile Image for Brady Hanson.
42 reviews1 follower
May 28, 2026
I remember “GS” from one of my favorite books by Peter Matthiessen “The Snow Leopard” and was intrigued to learn more about his life and work (and maybe more about what his thoughts were). Although I read this whole book (skimming parts as I went) I wouldn’t recommend it to my fellow nature lovers or adventure seekers. George Schaller certainly lived an interesting life and made an enduring impact on conservation and respect for wild places and animals. But the story in this book fell flat. In so far as the author didn’t really tell a story but laid out facts, details, logistics, and plenty of other research. That’s all great but made for a boring read and a book that could have used some really good editing down. And unfortunately George, the landscapes, and the animals almost seemed like a sideshow for pages at a time. Leaving me as a reader skimming along sometimes as she spelled out minutia and domestic going ons.
3 reviews
May 24, 2026
The writer seems to glorify and brag about all the animals tortured and killed in this story. Also the writing is a bit hard to follow quickly shifting from one speaker and topic to another; more focused on the wonderous talent of the author. For a nature lover, these reasons make it a difficult book to read but I really want to hear about the adventures of George Schaller. Looking forward to his memoir, from his perspective in his own poetic style.
Profile Image for Wisconsin Alumni.
536 reviews229 followers
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April 29, 2026
George B. Schaller MS’57, PhD’62
Subject of the book

From Mr. Schaller:
In this riveting portrait of George B. Schaller, the world’s leading field biologist, Miriam Horn captures the seventy years he spent living among wild animals in the world’s remotest regions, forever altering how we see—and save—the natural world.

Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews