After hearing Weber and Vedder give a fascinating talk at the American Museum of Natural History, it was only a matter of finding the time to read their account of working with endangered Mountain Gorillas in Rwanda. Besides discussing the gorilla populations, the book covers the Webers’ initial work with Dian Fossey at Karisoke at Parc des Volcans in the Virunga Mountains, the growing problems with work with the erratic Fossey that forced them to set up the Mountain Gorilla Project (Hence the split, that still exists to this date, that results in there being the Mountain Gorilla Project, a conservation program meshed with eco-tourism and local economic sustainable development programs, and the Dian Fossey Fund (originally the Digit Fund) that funds work on gorilla research.), and the struggles with the growth of MGP, as well as gives details on Rwanda, including a personal perspective on the ethnic tensions that led to the genocide in 1994. The book is a fairly quick read and is recommended to all who want an understanding of our close cousins, the Mountain Gorillas, as well as to those who want to read about a modern-day conservation success-story or are looking for something positive to read about Rwanda after reading Gourevitch’s harrowing We Wish To Inform You that Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families: Tales from Rwanda.