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Cry of the Kalahari

Mark Owens, Delia Owens
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Plot Summary

Cry of the Kalahari

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Adult | Published in 1984

Plot Summary

Cry of the Kalahari is a 1984 autobiography by American zoologists Delia and Mark Owens. Written while the husband and wife were on the cusp of middle age, it looks back on their time as wildlife researchers in Botswana’s Kalahari Desert. They lived there for most of the 1970s, staking their home in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve at a remote site called Deception Valley. They lived an eight-hour drive from the nearest human-inhabited area, surrounded by a rich and dangerous wilderness. They focus their research on the African carnivore family, particularly jackals, hyenas, and lions. The autobiography positions the Owenses as aspiring scientists in a hostile wilderness indifferent to their search for knowledge.

The autobiography first tells the story of Delia and Mark’s first meeting, while in college at Georgia State. Sharing a passion for the wilderness, animal biology, and ecology, they eventually endeavor to find funding to conduct independent research in Africa. Realizing that no institutions will likely fund them, they quit school and save up money for three years. At that point, they sell all of their possessions for extra cash and leave for Africa.

The Owenses fly into Johannesburg. From there, they take a charter plane to Botswana, traveling through a local village called Maun to the Kalahari Desert in a derelict Land Rover. After a long drive, they finally make it to Deception Valley. The Owenses recall that they had no idea, at this point, that they would not end their project for seven years.



Due to their low funds, the Owenses only have the most critical of provisions. Their camp, highly vulnerable to the harsh environment, attracts the attention of local wildlife, including its apex predators. They learn quickly that the Valley of Deception’s remoteness means that its denizens have no learned fear of humans. At first, they sleep in their truck, safe from hyenas and big cats; one night, however, Delia naively decides to sleep in their makeshift tent. She wakes in the middle of the night and sees a pair of male lions entering her tent with their eyes trained on her. Luckily, Mark notices and chases them away with the truck. They casually leave the campsite but return several more times, though never to stalk them as prey.

The Owenses choose to focus the bulk of their research on the behavior and eating habits of the brown hyena and desert lion. At the time, almost no fieldwork had been done on the two species specifically in the unique environment of the Kalahari. Before they complete their research, they run out of money. However, just in time, they win a grant from National Geographic, and later, another from the Zoological Society in Frankfurt. The latter grant allows them to continue their research as long as they need.

The Owenses use the conclusion of their autobiography to relate their findings. They discovered that lions in the Kalahari, unlike lions in the Serengeti, have different methods for accepting lionesses into prides. The Kalahari lioness fills the role of a protective maternal figure, while the Serengeti lioness hunts just as the males do. In their research on the brown hyenas, they make a groundbreaking discovery that in the Kalahari, the hyenas form clans with highly organized, hierarchical social arrangements. This finding debunked a previous misconception that hyenas were lone scavengers by nature. The Owenses developed a compelling theory for the differences in behaviors seen in the Kalahari: the incredibly hot, sparse, and drought-like ecosystem forced the species to find new ecological niches over generations.



Cry of the Kalahari concludes at the end of the seven-year research period. Mark and Delia leave Africa with an enduring love for the animals they lived alongside, regretting nothing about forgoing college to accomplish their mission.
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