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"This book is the fruit of long-term fieldwork, library research, and regional comparison-making in a special ethnological arena. Prof. Forth's remit is wide, and his scholarly scope is correspondingly deep...[T]his book is a scholarly and intellectual tour de force in the grand traditions of comparative enquiry in mainstream anthropology. It is also an eloquent testimony to the stimulus of field materials, indicating how an interest in ebu gogo tales among the Nage led Forth into such a sweeping, original, and thoughtful comparative odyssey." - Andrew Strathern and Pamela J. Stewart, Anthropos 105.2010
"Forth's thesis does need to be taken seriously. What he succeeds in doing, in the best tradition of comparative anthropological investigation, is to provide us with a wealth of cultural material that raises new questions about the status of the images of 'wildmen', and encourages anthropology to devote more attention to what has hitherto been a neglected field of study" - Victor T. King, University of Leeds, UK, Folklore, December 2010
"A comprehensive study of an interesting topic in folklore, anthropology, and zoology. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above." - R. Fritze, CHOICE (December 2009)