How to Save the Amazon

A Journalist’s Fatal Quest for Answers

Dom Phillips

With Contributors

9781645023203
Pages:304 pages
Book Art:Black & White Photos
Size: 6x9 inch
Publisher:Chelsea Green Publishing
Pub. Date: June 10, 2025
ISBN: 9781645023203

How to Save the Amazon

A Journalist’s Fatal Quest for Answers

With Contributors

Availability: Available on backorder

Hardcover

$27.95



Journalist Dom Phillips traveled deep into the Amazon rainforest searching for solutions to the problem of deforestation, a threat to the local ecosystem, native tribes, and the global climate. When he was murdered in the Javari Valley by a group of environmental criminals, a cohort of journalists and activists took up his work to finish his book and share his important message.

During the dark days of the Bolsonaro administration, British journalist Dom Phillips set out to accomplish an ambitious goal: through research, interviews, and site visits deep in the rainforest, he would emerge with a book answering the question—how can we save the Amazon? Traveling with his companion Indigenous expert Bruno Pereira, Dom’s adventure includes trekking through Amazonia to see where ranching, fires, illegal fishing, mining, the drug trade, and urbanization have deforested and degraded millions of acres of important forest, degraded ecosystems, and created dangerous conditions for the Indigenous tribes who have called the Amazon home for thousands of years.

Jair Bolsonaro came into power on a platform of anti-environmental exploitation and deregulation. During his term, deforestation in the Amazon, the “lungs of Planet Earth,” increased exponentially as environmental criminals took advantage of lax rules, advantageous land use policy, and the difficulty of enforcing laws in a remote area of immense size. Lawlessness reigned and environmental activists found themselves in danger. With the intention of discovering strategies to protect both the land and the people who inhabit it, Dom connected with politicians, farmers, and Indigenous activists to study the benefits and pitfalls of solutions like agroforestry, tourism, and the bioeconomy. While traveling by boat in the Javari Valley, Dom and Bruno were brutally murdered. Unwilling to see her late husband’s work be for naught, Dom’s widow, Ale, and his literary agent assembled a team of expert writers, journalists, and activists to complete his work, with each tackling one unfinished chapter and grappling with the challenge of interpreting his field notes and discovering his conclusions. How to Save the Amazon, therefore, is a book both by and about Dom Phillips, his quest for answers, and his search for hope.

 

Reviews and Praise

  • “How to Save the Amazon is a work of courage interrupted by tragedy. It is a tribute to Dom Phillips’s passion and openheartedness that his friends came together to finish his work. No book speaks more persuasively to the importance of the Amazon and the dangers that it faces.”—Elizabeth Kolbert, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Sixth Extinction


More Reviews and Praise


  • “This book is the best possible tribute to a martyred colleague—these writers have helped finish the work he couldn’t, offering a picture of this crucial place and suggesting some of the ways we might still help it to survive. We can’t let life on this Earth be snuffed out; this powerful book will help us to rise to this challenge.”—Bill McKibben, author of The Flag, the Cross, and the Station Wagon

  • “Bold, pacy, bursting with optimism and filled with vivid descriptions and deft pen-portraits, this is the work of an indomitable soul – and a tribute to how much Dom Phillips was clearly loved by his friends and colleagues. How to Save the Amazon is a beauty of a book. Let Dom and Bruno’s legacy be that we finally listen to the Indigenous defenders of the Amazon who have guarded it for so long.”—Guy Shrubsole, author of The Lost Rainforests of Britain

  • “This book bleeds with the passion, tenacity and eloquence of a man who gave his life for the Amazon. Dom’s intense life, cut short, will inspire and unite environmental defenders the world over.”—Yuvan Aves, author of Intertidal

  • “This is an important book which we should all read. Heartbreaking, devastating, yet also somehow hopeful. How to Save the Amazon records the relentless destruction of nature and its brutal effect on communities, but it’s also a rallying call to listen to those who know: the Indigenous people who have lived in and protected this magnificent part of our planet for centuries.”—Andrea Wulf, author of The Invention of Nature

  • “A defiant triumph of a book that roars forth from the frontlines of this deadly war against our life-support systems. By turns shocking, heartbreaking and deeply inspiring, this book – this act of solidarity – makes my heart leap. For there in the deeply researched intricacies and complexities of a forest torn apart are the seeds of hope: the courageous people fighting back, and they will not be silenced thanks to Dom and his brilliant pen-mates.”—Gaia Vince, author of Adventures in the Anthropocene

  • “An important dispatch from one of the burning centers of the world.”—Michael Malay, author of Late Night, winner of the 2024 Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing




About Dom Phillips

DOM PHILLIPS was a highly experienced and award-winning British freelance journalist. He moved to Brazil in 2007 and wrote extensively for British and American newspapers such as the Guardian and Washington Post. In 2021, he was awarded an Alicia Patterson Foundation fellowship for his book project How to Save the Amazon and was made the 2021 Cissy Patterson Environmental Fellow. In June 2022, Dom and Brazilian expert on Indigenous affairs Bruno Pereira were killed in a remote part of the Amazon while Dom was researching this book.

In 2023, How to Save the Amazon was awarded a Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant, and in 2024, Dom’s widow, Alessandra Sampaio, set up the Dom Phillips Institute in his memory. At the request of Alessandra and Dom’s relatives, the unfinished work on the book was completed by a dedicated team of international writers and journalists brought together by Jonathan Watts, the Guardian’s environment correspondent.

With thanks to the following contributors: Jon Lee Anderson, Eliane Brum, Andrew Fishman, Stuart Grudgings, Tom Hennigan, Beto Marubo, Helena Palmquist, Tom Phillips, Jonathan Watts, and translators Julia Sanches and Diane Whitty.

Books by Dom Phillips