Description

Book Synopsis
An interdisciplinary study of the relationship between hyenas and the people of Harar, Ethiopia.

Trade Review

“[This] book is nothing short of amazing.”

—William Hageman Chicago Tribune


“I shouldn’t say that I envy Marcus for his intimacy with hyenas, because intimacy is the world’s best way of gaining knowledge of an animal, and there’s no such thing as too much knowledge about hyenas. Instead, I should acknowledge the deep gratitude I feel, and that all of us should feel, about this work that he’s done and the possibilities it offers. If we knew all animals as he knows hyenas, we’d save the world.”

—Elizabeth Marshall Thomas


“In Among the Bone Eaters, Marcus Baynes-Rock takes us on a journey that challenges what we think we know about humans and other animals. Hyenas do certainly like us for food, but sometimes they also like us as collaborators, as community members, and maybe even as friends. This rigorous, personal, and enticing account of the hyenas and humans of Harar dares us to expand our horizons and rethink humans’ roles as members of a multitude of multispecies relationships.”

—Agustín Fuentes,University of Notre Dame


Among the Bone Eaters is a fascinating read. Most readers will be surprised to learn about the very close, reciprocal, and mutually beneficial relationships that have evolved between resident carnivorous spotted hyenas and people in Harar—and how overcoming fear led to enduring friendships. This book touches on a very timely topic, namely, human-animal relationships (anthrozoology) in a human-dominated world in which these sorts of encounters are not only inevitable but also essential to understanding.”

—Marc Bekoff,author of Rewilding Our Hearts: Building Pathways of Compassion and Coexistence


“Most of us accept that humans are enmeshed in multispecies relationships, but the case of the hyenas and humans of Harar shakes us out of our complacency. Marcus Baynes-Rock scientifically, personally, and beautifully introduces us to a new world of possibilities—and to the wide spectrum of interspecies relationships.”

—Agustín Fuentes,University of Notre Dame


“This is a compelling account of the intersecting worlds of humans and hyenas in a shared architectural landscape. Baynes-Rock shares with us his intimate experiences developing social relations with hyenas as well as humans, thereby confounding distinctions between ethology and ethnography. By extending anthropology’s intersubjective approach to nonhumans, he explores the overlapping dynamics of hyena and human lifeworlds, producing a work that will undoubtedly make a significant contribution to the emerging field of multispecies ethnography.”

—Piers Locke,University of Canterbury


“Through a rich narrative, filled with the people, events, sights, and sounds of the distant city of Harar, we are invited to share space, place, and time with the least likely compatriot for humans: the spotted hyena. Marcus Baynes-Rock guides us into a world that is simultaneously strange and familiar, and we leave transformed. This book is great anthropology, a great story, and most importantly—it will change the way you think about being human with other animals.”

—Agustín Fuentes,University of Notre Dame


Among the Bone Eaters isn’t precisely a natural history of the spotted hyena, nor is it precisely an ethnography of the Harari. Instead, it’s an utterly remarkable combination of the two, a portrait of a human community forging a working relationship with Africa’s second-largest carnivore.”

—Steve Donoghue Open Letters Monthly


Among the Bone Eaters is a probing look at the complex relationship between humans and wild animals. . . . Baynes-Rock’s immersive account is told with sharp-eyed, self-effacing prose, and he leaves nothing out—Ethiopia’s sluggish bureaucracy, the town’s maze-like geography, and even the Oromo woman he meets and eventually marries. It’s as much a travelogue as it is a research study.”

—Chelsea Leu Sierra


“The important thing to remember is that this is not a book just about hyenas or just about Hararis; it’s about both, all held together with its greater-than-the-sum-of-its-parts third element of the curious and fascinating societal adaptations made by both parties that has enabled the humans and hyenas of Harar to live in balance together. Truly, it is a book quite unlike any other you’ve likely ever read.”

—John E. Riutta The Well-Read Naturalist


Among the Bone Eaters will appeal to a general audience interested in learning more about hyenas and the subtle aspects of their interactions with humans as well as to professional anthropologists and ethnographers.”

Choice


“Remarkable. . . . This is a delightful book, full of fascinating portraits of humans and hyenas in a remote corner of the world where ancient lines of animosity are blurred.”

—Milbry C. Polk The Explorers Journal



Table of Contents

Contents

Foreword by Elizabeth Marshall Thomas

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1 Past Finding Around Harar

2 Lines of Reason for Hyenas

3 Between Different Relations

4 You Hyenas

5 The Legend of Ashura

6 On the Tail of a Hyena

7 Encounters with the Unseen

8 Reflections from a Hyena Playground

9 Death, Death, and Rhetoric

10 Blood of the Hyena

11 Across a Human/Hyena Boundary

12 A Host of Other Ideas

13 Returning to Other Hyenas

14 Talking Up Hyena Realities

15 Looking Through a Hyena Hole

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Among the Bone Eaters

    Product form

    £26.96

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £29.95 – you save £2.99 (9%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Marcus Baynes-Rock, Elizabeth Marshall Thomas

    7 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Among the Bone Eaters by Marcus Baynes-Rock

      Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
      Publication Date: 8/31/2015 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780271067209, 978-0271067209
      ISBN10: 0271067209
      Also in:
      Cultural studies

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An interdisciplinary study of the relationship between hyenas and the people of Harar, Ethiopia.

      Trade Review

      “[This] book is nothing short of amazing.”

      —William Hageman Chicago Tribune


      “I shouldn’t say that I envy Marcus for his intimacy with hyenas, because intimacy is the world’s best way of gaining knowledge of an animal, and there’s no such thing as too much knowledge about hyenas. Instead, I should acknowledge the deep gratitude I feel, and that all of us should feel, about this work that he’s done and the possibilities it offers. If we knew all animals as he knows hyenas, we’d save the world.”

      —Elizabeth Marshall Thomas


      “In Among the Bone Eaters, Marcus Baynes-Rock takes us on a journey that challenges what we think we know about humans and other animals. Hyenas do certainly like us for food, but sometimes they also like us as collaborators, as community members, and maybe even as friends. This rigorous, personal, and enticing account of the hyenas and humans of Harar dares us to expand our horizons and rethink humans’ roles as members of a multitude of multispecies relationships.”

      —Agustín Fuentes,University of Notre Dame


      Among the Bone Eaters is a fascinating read. Most readers will be surprised to learn about the very close, reciprocal, and mutually beneficial relationships that have evolved between resident carnivorous spotted hyenas and people in Harar—and how overcoming fear led to enduring friendships. This book touches on a very timely topic, namely, human-animal relationships (anthrozoology) in a human-dominated world in which these sorts of encounters are not only inevitable but also essential to understanding.”

      —Marc Bekoff,author of Rewilding Our Hearts: Building Pathways of Compassion and Coexistence


      “Most of us accept that humans are enmeshed in multispecies relationships, but the case of the hyenas and humans of Harar shakes us out of our complacency. Marcus Baynes-Rock scientifically, personally, and beautifully introduces us to a new world of possibilities—and to the wide spectrum of interspecies relationships.”

      —Agustín Fuentes,University of Notre Dame


      “This is a compelling account of the intersecting worlds of humans and hyenas in a shared architectural landscape. Baynes-Rock shares with us his intimate experiences developing social relations with hyenas as well as humans, thereby confounding distinctions between ethology and ethnography. By extending anthropology’s intersubjective approach to nonhumans, he explores the overlapping dynamics of hyena and human lifeworlds, producing a work that will undoubtedly make a significant contribution to the emerging field of multispecies ethnography.”

      —Piers Locke,University of Canterbury


      “Through a rich narrative, filled with the people, events, sights, and sounds of the distant city of Harar, we are invited to share space, place, and time with the least likely compatriot for humans: the spotted hyena. Marcus Baynes-Rock guides us into a world that is simultaneously strange and familiar, and we leave transformed. This book is great anthropology, a great story, and most importantly—it will change the way you think about being human with other animals.”

      —Agustín Fuentes,University of Notre Dame


      Among the Bone Eaters isn’t precisely a natural history of the spotted hyena, nor is it precisely an ethnography of the Harari. Instead, it’s an utterly remarkable combination of the two, a portrait of a human community forging a working relationship with Africa’s second-largest carnivore.”

      —Steve Donoghue Open Letters Monthly


      Among the Bone Eaters is a probing look at the complex relationship between humans and wild animals. . . . Baynes-Rock’s immersive account is told with sharp-eyed, self-effacing prose, and he leaves nothing out—Ethiopia’s sluggish bureaucracy, the town’s maze-like geography, and even the Oromo woman he meets and eventually marries. It’s as much a travelogue as it is a research study.”

      —Chelsea Leu Sierra


      “The important thing to remember is that this is not a book just about hyenas or just about Hararis; it’s about both, all held together with its greater-than-the-sum-of-its-parts third element of the curious and fascinating societal adaptations made by both parties that has enabled the humans and hyenas of Harar to live in balance together. Truly, it is a book quite unlike any other you’ve likely ever read.”

      —John E. Riutta The Well-Read Naturalist


      Among the Bone Eaters will appeal to a general audience interested in learning more about hyenas and the subtle aspects of their interactions with humans as well as to professional anthropologists and ethnographers.”

      Choice


      “Remarkable. . . . This is a delightful book, full of fascinating portraits of humans and hyenas in a remote corner of the world where ancient lines of animosity are blurred.”

      —Milbry C. Polk The Explorers Journal



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      Foreword by Elizabeth Marshall Thomas

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      1 Past Finding Around Harar

      2 Lines of Reason for Hyenas

      3 Between Different Relations

      4 You Hyenas

      5 The Legend of Ashura

      6 On the Tail of a Hyena

      7 Encounters with the Unseen

      8 Reflections from a Hyena Playground

      9 Death, Death, and Rhetoric

      10 Blood of the Hyena

      11 Across a Human/Hyena Boundary

      12 A Host of Other Ideas

      13 Returning to Other Hyenas

      14 Talking Up Hyena Realities

      15 Looking Through a Hyena Hole

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account