The Jungle South of the Mountain
CBC Books | CBC | Posted: March 9, 2017 3:53 PM | Last Updated: April 10, 2017
Andrew Westoll
In an unnamed country on the northern coast of South America, scientist Stanley is deeply embedded in the life of the rainforest. He's been studying a troop of capuchin monkeys for eight years — seven since his wife, Maria, left him, and their mentor mysteriously disappeared. The country is preparing for a hotly contested election, which promises to unleash ancient tensions among the populace. Stanley, however, is oblivious to this, focused only on his research and his conviction that Maria will one day come back to him. But then his research is violently threatened: one of his beloved monkeys goes missing, and then another. Something is killing them, one by one. Stanley decides to take matters into his own hands, but soon learns that there are forces in the jungle as difficult to quell as the spirit of rebellion brewing in the south. Soon, Stanley finds everything he holds dear — his livelihood, his monkeys, his very life — in danger.
The Jungle South of the Mountain is a powerful, brilliantly imagined novel about the stories we believe, the lies we tell and the choices we make to protect what we love. (From HarperCollins Canada)
From the book
The letter arrived with the provisions, and when Stanley spotted it among the bags of cassava flour and the cans of beans and the bottles of palum he understood the rains were on their way. It was that time of year again, the last weeks of the dry season, when Maria penned her annual letter and Stanley braced himself for the deluge. Before he'd unfurled his hammock for the night and cracked the rum, he had slipped the unopened letter and a fresh jugo of beer into his day pack.
From The Jungle South of the Mountain by Andrew Westoll ©2016. Published by HarperCollins Canada.