

The Joubert's have spent the last 20 to 30 years in Africa filming and writing about African wildlife. The book coincides with the 2005 National Geographic documentary with the same title that was also filmed by the authors. This huge (10in X 14in) coffee-table book is filled with incredible photos of lions, buffalo and African landscapes. The companion volume to a new National Geographic film airing in 2006, this is an unforgettable once-in-a-lifetime glimpse of the world's most awe-inspiring hunters, the lethal and beautiful lions of Duba. The lions leap and dodge, but not always swiftly enough to escape-and so the ancient struggle goes on. These massive beasts are challenging prey they fight back fiercely, aggressively seeking out the big cats and attacking them with deadly thrusts of their sharp, sweeping horns. Month after month, they battled floods, hardship, and danger to capture these spectacular shots of the relentless blood rivalry played out on the Okavanga Delta every day as three separate lion prides harry a huge herd of buffalo. Of all their long experience, the Jouberts consider their two years with the lions of Duba the most exciting, important research they have done-here presented in fascinating text and 100 gripping images.

For decades they've lived among lions, winning international acclaim for their unique photographs and pioneering documentaries, which record lions' previously unknown behavior such as nocturnal forays and a willingness to stalk their quarry through water. It's a scene as old as Africa itself, yet its sudden, violent drama is always new.ĭereck and Beverly Joubert know it well. The tawny lion slinks through golden grass, stealthy and sinuous, utterly concentrated on the hunt, a perfect predator awaiting only the instant when pure instinct triggers the rush, the spring, the ferocious slash of sharp claws and merciless fangs that will bring down her prey.
