"Carrie Frieses Cloning Wild Life: Zoos, Captivity and the Future of Endangered Animals is a terrific book. Friese begins with the observation that efforts to clone endangered animals have in general been well received by the public, in contrast to the outcry and suspicion that has greeted cloning animals raised for food, and cloning of humans. Controversy, instead, has been internal to zoo and conservation science. In a subtle delineation of the contours and stakes of these insider controversies, Friese goes far beyond the usual pro- and con-discourses about novel biotechnologies. She shows us nuclear transfer cloning as a flexible, powerful technology that connects many possible views of nature found and made and what it might be to conserve it. Excitingly, she also argues that cloning in relation to the conservation of endangered species is playing an important role in the current expansion of our understanding of genetics beyond the nucleus." - Charis Thompson,author of Making Parents: The Ontological Choreography of Reproductive Technologies "In this brilliant study of cloned wild life, Carrie Friese adds a whole new dimension to the study of reproduction, illustrating vividly and persuasively how social and biological reproduction are inextricably bound together, and why this matters." - Sarah Franklin,author of Dolly Mixtures: the Remaking of Genealogy "What a strange and useful book this is!" - Stewart Brand (Issues in Science and Technology) "[ T]his book raises important questions and issues regarding conservation cloning. Thebook offers unique insights both through the thorough unearthing of relevant theory andthe analysis of scientists views on their endangered animal cloning practices." (New Genetics and Society) "AsCloning Wild Lifeis, ultimately, a work of sociology, Frieses main interest here is in how cloning reorients questions about our human relationship with the natural world. Her analysis is timely given the robust interest in investigating the Anthropocenea proposed new geologic period marked by our collective human ability to remake the earthand the ways in which the human impact on the environment blurs the boundaries of traditional designations like nature and culture." (MAKE Literary Magazine)