"In a world saturated with imageswhere beauty is too often divorced from meaning and atrocity reduced to contentParadise Inc. by Guillaume Bonn offers something far rarer: a work of moral clarity, radical honesty, and necessary discomfort. At once elegy and indictment, memoir and investigation, it is a searing visual and textual reckoning with colonial legacies, environmental collapse, and the politics of representation." Alessia Glaviano, Vogue
"The time has come to face the facts, as east Africas age-old natural landscapes and wildlife habitats inexorably disappear. Paradise Inc. is therefore a requiem, and perhaps even an epitaph, but it is also a personal plea by Guillaume for the books readers to shake off their illusions and to see things as they really are, before it really is too late."Jon Lee Anderson, The Gentlemen's Journal
"Guillaume Bonns photographs, part of a 20-year project to document the growing clash between animals and humans in Kenya, Somalia, Botswana and South Africa, tell a different story."Steve Bloomfield, The Observer
"For three decades, photographer Guillaume Bonn has traversed East Africa, documenting how civilizations quintuple threats of modernity, development, population growth, armed conflict, and climate change have imperiled the regions wildlife, habitats, and human communities [ ] The result is an epic new book, Paradise Inc. [ ] The photographs, often in jarring juxtaposition, underscore the cruel bargain of Western 'progress'and the paradoxical damage brought on by a half century of conservation and preservation efforts." David Friend, Vanity Fair
[ ] Photojournalist Guillaume Bonns haunting images expose the dark side of Africas wildlife havens, which are increasingly falling victim to unchecked industrialism [ ] Bonns images expose the failure of our conservation modelone that isolates wildlife instead of integrating it.Elena Clavarino, Air Mail
"This is a book I have been waiting to read, and the author is the person I have been longing to talk to. Guillaume, you raise very pertinent issues that are not new to the world but rather have been ignored by the world." Ezekiel Ole Katato, Maasai elder and culturalist, from the foreword