Since 1985, Louis Sarno has made his home among the Ba-Benjelle Pygmies in the southwestern corner of the Central African Republic, now a part of the Dzanga-Sangha Dense Forest Reserve. He and his Bayakan wife have two children. His exploration of the Pygmies is now the focus of a major documentary film. He is originally from New Jersey.
Alex Shoumatoff is a senior contributing editor to Vanity Fair and a former staff writer at the New Yorker. He is the author of The Rivers Amazon, Russian Blood, In Southern Light, and The World is Burning, among other books, and editor of the website Dispatches from the Vanishing World, celebrating the world's fast-disappearing natural and cultural diversity. His book on the impacts of palm oil plantations on the indigenous people and animals of Borneo is forthcoming from Beacon Press.
Michael Obert is an award-winning German author and journalist. Over the past twenty years he has traveled to the remotest parts of the world, with a particular focus on covering Africa and the Middle East. His seven-month journey from the source of the Niger River to its mouth brought fame with his best-selling book Regenzauber (On the River of Gods). Song from the Forestis his first film. He lives in Berlin.
Philosopher and musician David Rothenberg is the author of Thousand Mile Song, about making music with whales; Why Birds Sing; Sudden Music: Improvisation, Art, Nature; Blue Cliff Record: Zen Echoes; Hand's End: Technology and the Limits of Nature; and Always the Mountains. He is a professor of philosophy and music at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.