“A perceptive if partisan examination of a continent-wide controversy over how best to preserve Africa's amazing wildlife heritage.”
— San Francisco Chronicle
“This book is a must-read for anyone interested in African wildlife conservation.”
— Sports Afield Magazine
“Highly engaging and colorful in style, Martin paints a picture of animal rights-based conservation policies, which neglect the livelihoods of local people. Central focus of his book is the excitingly displayed evidence that the priority of animal rights over wildlife management just achieves the opposite of what is intended—it has fatal results for the very existence and future of the African fauna.”
— African Indaba
“This book is an important contribution to the debate on wildlife conservation in Africa and needs to be widely read.”
— IUCN SULInews
“A carefully-researched and –considered review of the state of African wildlife. . . . Even if the reader in, say, North America or Europe, does not have the means or desire to visit Africa to see what’s left of Africa’s wildlife, this book can serve as a very important warning of what could happen—has—is—happening where they do live, visit, farm, hunt, die.”
— Wired Cosmos
“A nuanced investigation.”
— Publishers Weekly
"How best to preserve biological diversity and protect endangered species drives the conservation impulse on every continent, but none more so than Africa. In Game Changer Glen Martin plunges bravely into the center of a scalding scientific debate and without sentiment or prejudice reveals and lauds what works on the world's most biodiverse continent, while exposing the destructive romanticism, inchoate philosophy, and outright idiocy that is steering so many contemporary wildlife conservation efforts toward failure."—Mark Dowie, author of Conservation Refugees: The Hundred-Year Conflict Between Global Conservation and Native Peoples
"We are well into a massive global environmental crisis, against which the worldviews and tactics of status quo conservation are manifestly inadequate. Game Changer may well be the most explosively controversial look yet at this tragic state of affairs, viewed through the conflicted topics of animal rights, hunting, and African cultural diversity. I couldn’t put this book down and I can scarcely wait for the inevitable critical reactions, in hopes that Glen Martin’s provocative candor will lead to more effective solutions." —Harry Greene, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Cornell University
"A sobering exposé of Africa’s wilderness facade. Martin tours Kenya’s legendary Eden of elephant and lion, wildebeest and rhino, and finds it on the verge of crumbling under the weight of a burgeoning populace and a misguided conservation agenda. Martin's is a gritty tale of bush meat and ivory, poachers and poverty, and a call for a more pragmatic approach toward saving the last great herds of Earth’s quintessential wild kingdom." —Will Stolzenburg, author of Rat Island: Predators in Paradise and the World's Greatest Wildlife Rescue
"The hardest lesson we all must learn about saving Africa’s wildlife: conservation can’t just be about the animals. Game Changer makes this case brilliantly. While the plight of individual animals pulls on our heartstrings, Glen Martin fearlessly show us how conservationists must think about entire landscapes, including people." —Jonathan Adams, author of The Myth of Wild Africa