When I picked up Whatever You Do, Don’t Run: True Tales of a Botswana Safari Guide, I expected a book full of stories about African wildlife, kind of like Wild Kingdom or the National Geographic Channelin print. What I got was better: a light memoir by Peter Allison about the experience of being an African safari guide, warts and all. Although Allison shares plenty of stories about animals, the real f
ocus is on the people he met while guiding, from the “bird nerds” who wanted to stop to look at every bird on the drive into camp, to the camera-toting Japanese guests annoyed by the animals’ inability to follow instructions. Sometimes poignant, sometimes outrageously funny, but always entertaining, this book is a quick and rewarding read.
Whatever You Do, Don’t Run: True Tales of a Botswana Safari Guide Peter Allison 2007 Lyons Press
Some years ago, I had this idea for a children’s alphabet bookabout endangered animals. I researched it for a while, but I eventually abandoned the project because I couldn’t figure out how to make the book rigorous but not depressing. I’m glad to say that David McLimans manages to do both in Gone Wild: An Endangered Animal Alphabet.
As the Zygote Games Science Guru, it was my job to pore through piles of
scientific papers and technical books looking for juicy details to incorporate into Parasites Unleashed. And most of the books and papers I read through were, to put it mildly, dry. So it was fun to pick up Marlene Zuk’s lively new book, Riddled With Life: Friendly Worms, Ladybug Sex, and the Parasites That Make Us Who We Are (Harcourt, 2007).
It’s just the start of the summer, but my kids are already bringing me the insects
they find in the yard and demanding to know what they are. Some things are easy – fireflies, ladybugs, or stinkbugs, for example – but if they show up with a larva, or so-help-me a leaf with an egg on it, I’m usually at a loss. And most of the guidebooks in our house are no help, either. They’re great for identifying adult stages, but they usually don’t include egg or larval forms. This is the problem that The Life Cycles of Butterflies by Judy Burris and Wayne Richards (2006, Storey Publishing) solves, at least for a few of the butterfly species you’re most likely to find in your yard.
Despite its title, Curious Footprints: Professor Hitchcock’s Dinosaur Tracks & Other Natural History Treasures at Amherst College is not a traditional exhibit-by-exhibit guidebook for Amherst College’s Museum of Natural History. Instead, it’s a companion book that gives the reader a tiny taste of the museum’s long history and its behind-the-scenes contents.
Today marks the 207th anniversary of the establishment of the U.S. Library of Congress. On April 24, 1800, President John Adams approved legislation providing $5000 to purchase books for the use of Members of Congress, as part of the infant U.S. government's move to its permanent seat in Washington D.C.
The first collection was burned by the raiding British during the War of 1812, but Thomas Jefferson offered his personal library as a replacement -- and more than doubling the size of the library in the process.
Jefferson's spirit still provides the Library's guiding philosophy: nothing is outside the purview of the Library of Congress. It collects books about everything. Nowadays it adds about 10,000 items per day to the collection.
Another book I grabbed on that trip to the Daedalus
Books Warehouse is Animal Footprints by Yoshinko Kato. It’s a Japanese children’s science book covering a hodgepodge of fourteen mammals ranging from elephants to spiny echidnas. The text is laid out as an assortment of random facts about each species, with a focus on how the animals use their feet. It’s not too different from the treatment you find in many children’s encyclopedias, and if this were all the book had to offer it would probably get looked at once or twice and never come off the shelf again. But the book also includes a life-size ink footprint from each of the animals it describes, and that’s the feature that keeps my three-year old coming back to it again and again.
Animal Footprints by Yoshinko Kato illustrated by Kunihiko Hisa English translation by Dianne Ooka 1993 Heian International, Inc.
A Perfect Mess is one of those pop management advice books that spends 200 pages developing a thesis that could easily be explained in 20. But it manages to be entertaining as it runs on, and has the virtue of being a quick read.
Diane A. Kelly Diane Kelly is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, where she studies the neural wiring and mechanical engineering of reproductive systems.
James L. Cambias Jim Cambias writes science fiction and designs games in the lonely wilderness of Western Massachusetts.
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