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Science |
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Amazing Rare Things: The
Art of Natural History in the Age of Discovery Attenborough, David Wiley PB 9780979845628 $37.95 This
extensively illustrated book showcases and explores a selection of the best
art of the ‘Age of Discovery’, drawn from a collection held in the Royal
Library in Windsor Castle. From the 15th century onwards, European explorers
were encountering exotic plants and wildlife in places such as Africa and the
Americas. Specimens were shipped back home, providing intriguing material for
artists, some of whom were then inspired to travel to these new places and
capture the wonders first-hand. These intricately observed illustrations and
watercolours have been selected with help from the contemporary world’s most
famed observer of the natural world, Sir David Attenborough, who also
contributes a thoughtful and engaging introduction. |
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Art of Nature: Three
Centuries of Natural History Art from Around the World
MAGEE, JUDITH Hardie Grant HB 9781740668569 $55.00 Compiled by
the art collections manager of the library of the Natural History Museum in
London, Art of Nature traces the depiction of the natural world by
naturalists, botanists and artists over the past 300 years. All the talented
names in natural history art are here, including Audubon, Gould and
present-day artists including New Zealander Bryan Poole. Magee’s informative text
reveals the compulsions that led naturalists and artists to study the natural
world and embark on potentially hazardous journeys to do so. Packed with
beautifully drawn and detailed illustrations of familiar and unfamiliar
animals, birds, insects, reptiles, flowers, plants and people, the book is
divided thematically into the continents of the Americas, Australasia, Asia,
Africa and Europe. |
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As Easy as Pi: Stuff About
Numbers That Isn't (Just) Maths BUCHAN, JAMIE Michael O'Mara HB 9781843173557 $24.95 Numbers,
said Pythagoras, rule the universe, and author Jamie Buchan sets out to prove
the point with a light-hearted investigation into ‘stuff about numbers that
isn’t (just) maths’. Numbers in language, religion, mythology, maths and
science are all covered, and thankfully there’s plenty of irreverence and
playfulness to balance out the more weighty themes. If you do feel a
flashback of school maths-induced panic coming on, just head for the numbers
in fiction chapter and read up about 007 and Hawaii Five-0, or discover why
buses have the annoying habit of coming in threes in the culture chapter. If
you’ve never previously given much thought to numbers, this book will have
you viewing the world of digits and numerals in a very different light. |
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Australia's Remarkable
Trees Allen Richard Miengunyah HB 9780522856699 $60.00 Writer
Richard Allen and photographer Kimbal Baker take us on a tour of Australia’s
50 oldest, largest and most unusual trees. The result of what must have been
a difficult choice is a marvellous collection covering every type of tree,
from Australian natives and introduced exotics to privately owned and
historically significant specimens. Full-colour photographs capture the magnificence
of the trees included in the selection (for example, the Wollemi pine,
described as one of the greatest living fossils discovered in the 20th
century) and just as captivating are the accompanying stories, anecdotes and
background text. |
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The Bedside Book of Beasts GIBSON, GRAEME Bloomsbury HB 9780747596103 $50.00 This
companion volume to the bestselling Bedside Book of Birds blends the best
writing about animals and their prey with a wealth of extraordinary
illustration. Among the writers included are Simon Armitage, Margaret Atwood,
Walter Benjamin, Italo Calvino, Angela Carter, Bruce Chatwin, Gerald Durrell,
Henri Fabre, E. M. Forster, Jean Giono, Zbigniew Herbert, W. H. Hudson, Ted
Hughes, Franz Kafka, Galway Kinnell, Rudyard Kipling, Barry Lopez, Konrad
Lorenz, Haruki Murakami, Robert Musil, Theodore Roosevelt, Leo Tolstoy and
Laurens van der Post. Illustrations include prehistoric cave paintings,
outstanding wildlife photography and works by Audubon, Robert Bateman,
William Blake, Mark Catesby, Francisco de Goya, Thomas Landseer, Rene
Magritte, Peter Paul Rubens and Henri Rousseau. |
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Cheating Death: The Doctors
and Medical Miracles that are Saving Lives Against All Odds Gupta, Sanjay Scribe PB 9781921640100 $32.95 US
neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta chronicles the death-defying medical achievements
made possible by modern-day science. Focusing on the dramatic stories of
several case studies, Gupta reveals that severe cold can save rather than
take a life, and that performing chest compression on cardiac arrest patients
can be more successful than mouth-to-mouth CPR. He discusses the REM nature
of near-death experiences, and the facts and fiction of ‘brain death’. Using
uncomplicated, accessible language, he analyses the role of prayer in health
and medicine, and the truth behind medical miracles. Ultimately, Gupta sees
death as a process rather than a single moment that ends life, hence the
opportunities to ‘cheat’ that final outcome. |
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The Curse of the Labrador
Duck CHILTON, GLEN Simon & Schuster PB 9781439102473 $35.00 Ornithologist
Glen Chilton describes himself as having been an obsessive child who grew
into an equally obsessive adult. The proof of the pudding is in this quirky
boy’s own adventure, the part travelogue, part kooky detective tale of one
man’s obsession to track down each and every stuffed specimen and egg of the
extinct Canadian Labrador duck in existence. The hapless Labrador duck became
extinct in the late 19th century and only 55 specimens remain in museums
scattered around the world. Chilton’s tale is peppered with anecdotes,
comical character studies and an offer of US$10,000 to the first person who
can point him in the direction of a genuine Labrador duck specimen he hasn’t
yet seen. Get looking! |
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Fireflies, Insects and Silk Waldbauer California HB 9780520258839 $44.95 When many
of us think of insects, we think of pests. But entomologist Gilbert Waldbauer
has been enthralled by the insect world ever since, as a schoolboy, he
watched a spectacular moth emerge from a cocoon he’d found and hoarded. That
schoolboy enthusiasm and wonder are still at the core of his passion for
insects, and – along with his mastery of his subject – infuse
every page of this delightful book. Fireflies, Honey and Silk is a
celebration of the insect world, the pleasure we take from it and the ways in
which human culture has been enriched by it over the centuries. Enlivened
with personal anecdotes and interwoven with history, mythology, literature
and medicine, this book details the products insects have given us, their
discovery, and their uses. |
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Hybrid: The History &
Science of Plant Breeding Kingsbury, Noel Chicago HB 9780226437040 $62.00 Disheartened
by the shrink-wrapped state of contemporary supermarket fruits and
vegetables, many shoppers hark back to a time when foods were naturally
produced rather than processed – and tasted different as a consequence.
But in this book, Noel Kingsbury draws on anecdotal, historical and
scientific accounts to reveal that those foods of our childhood memories were
themselves far from natural; rather, they represent the end of a
millennia-long history of selective breeding and hybridisation. Starting his story
at the birth of agriculture, Kingsbury traces the history of human attempts
to make plants more reliable, productive and nutritious. |
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The Metamorphosis of Plants Goethe MIT/Bradford HB 9780262013093 $38.95 It will
surprise many to learn that Goethe, one of Germany’s foremost literary
figures, considered his most significant life achievement to be his
scientific research and writing. This short book, first published in 1790,
was his attempt to explain ‘the truth about the how of the organism’. It was
to prove deeply influential – Charles Darwin cited Goethe’s theories of
‘morphology’, developed here, in many works, including The Origins of the
Species; and it was also a crucial influence on Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry
Thoreau. This beautiful illustrated edition has been carefully and
methodically matched with exquisite photographs taken to illustrate Goethe’s
points, as well as his own early sketches, and a selection of illustrations
from previous editions. |
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No Small Matter: Science on
the Nanoscale FRANKEL, FELICE C Belknap HB 9780674035669 $59.95 No Small
Matter takes an imaginative, intimate and often metaphorical look at
nanoscience – structures so tiny they’re invisible to a microscope’s
lens. Living cells, DNA, microprocessors, quantum dots, nanotubes – the
uses and possibilities, applications and implications of micro- and
nanotechnology touch a wealth of areas, including computing and biomedicine.
In elucidating concepts that are on the very frontier of modern science, the
authors are particularly interested in the often-alien forms that nano-sized
mechanisms can take at such a tiny scale. The images by scientific
photographer Felice C. Frankel help us to envisage the invisible, while text
by George M. Whitesides, who directs a research group into nanoscience,
describes the unseeable. A picture book with a difference. |
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The Oxford Book of Modern
Science Writing DAWKINS, RICHARD ED Oxford PB 9780199216819 $29.95 Dawkins’
absorbing anthology of the best writing penned by professional scientists
since the 20th century unites science and literature to brilliant effect.
Accessible and enlightening, the collection follows a roughly thematic rather
than chronological structure, divided into four parts: what scientists study,
who scientists are, what scientists think and what scientists delight in.
Contributions are preceded by illuminating introductory notes by Dawkins and
cover a wealth of subjects from astronomy to quantum mechanics. Authors
include Rachel Carson, Stephen Jay Gould, Francis Crick, Primo Levi and Carl
Sagan. Dawkins is the author of The Selfish Gene (OUP. PB. $32.95) and The
God Delusion (Black Swan. PB. $27.95). |
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Slow Death by Rubber Duck:
How the Toxic Chemistry of Everday Life Affects Our Health Smith, Rick and Lourie, Bruce UQP PB 9780702237645 $34.95 The premise
is straightforward: expose yourself to a variety of chemicals encountered in
everyday life and compare the results with a series of before and after blood
and urine tests. Canadian environmentalists Rick Smith and Bruce Lourie take
a Super Size Me approach, playing guinea pigs to expose themselves to a mixed
bag of toxic chemicals we are regularly exposed to in and around the home.
Test results show that levels of chemicals all increased in the body after
short-term exposure, sometimes dramatically so. Scary, when you consider that
the range of potential side-effects include cancer and testicular dysfunction
in children. This controversial work is a must-have for anyone interested in
knowing about (and seeking to avoid) the toxic chemicals we encounter in our
daily life. |
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Terra: Tales of the Earth,
Four Events that Changed the World Hamblyn, Richard Picador HB 9780330490733 $50.00 This
engrossing book draws on history and science – and employs the
narrative force of a novel. Richard Hamblyn tells the stories of four
large-scale natural disasters: the Lisbon earthquake of 1755, the
weather-panics of the summer of 1783, the eruption of Krakatau in 1883 and
the Hilo tsunami of 1946. He uses historical sources and eyewitness accounts
to report the damage they wrought, and follows the journey of scientists and
policy-makers in tracing the probable causes, rebuilding the damaged societies
and taking valuable lessons from the disasters. The settings of each disaster
are sharply alive, from the ‘aromas of burning tobacco and caramelised sugar’
that pervaded the fires of the Lisbon earthquake to the corpses piled in an
icehouse after the Hilo tsunami. |
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HIGHLIGHT Alex and Me: How a
Scientist & a Parrot discovered a Hidden World of Animal Intelligence Pepperberg, Irene Scribe PB 9781921372728 $27.95 The story
of how a scientist and a parrot discovered a hidden world of animal
intelligence – and formed a deep bond in the process. |
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HIGHLIGHT Bad Science Goldacre, Ben Harper Collins PB 9780007284870 $25.00 A hilarious
and informative journey through the world of the wrong or misleading science
that regularly appears in advertising and the media. |
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HIGHLIGHT Bird Australia Dorling Kindersley Dorling Kindersley HB 9781740336994 $69.95 This
celebration of our amazing bird varieties features stunning full-colour
photographs. |
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HIGHLIGHT Catching Fire: How Cooking
Made Us Human WRANGHAM, RICHARD Profile PB 9781846682858 $35.00 In Catching
Fire, anthropologist and chimpanzee-expert Richard Wrangham poses the idea
that humanity’s breakthrough from monkey to mankind wasn’t due to the
development of language or the importance of having an opposable thumb
– instead, it was the invention of fire and the creation of cooking.
The book begins by debunking the usefulness of raw food, outlining our
failure to thrive on a raw-food diet and our vulnerability to bacteria in
uncooked foods. Wrangham goes on to trace the beginnings of cooking with
fire, and posits the belief that using fire led to an increase in the size of
our brains by freeing up time for things other than hunting and chewing. It’s
a fascinating and controversial theory of evolution that also sheds light on
the traditionally accepted role of women as homemakers. |
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HIGHLIGHT Darwin's Armada McCalman, Iain Viking PB 9780670071586 $49.95 This
gripping work portrays the Darwinian revolution as a collective enterprise
forged in Australasia by Darwin and three other 19th-century naturalists. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Greatest Show on Earth:
The Evidence for Evolution Dawkins, Richard Doubleday PB 9780593061749 $35.00 The fiery
science/religion debate continues as Dawkins, world-renowned evolutionary
biologist and famous atheist, takes on the Creationists. |
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HIGHLIGHT He Knew He Was Right: The
Irrepressible Life of James Lovelock & Gaia Gribbin, John Penguin PB 9780141031613 $26.95 An
authorised biography of James Lovelock, an iconic figure in British science
and the father of Gaia theory. NB: December release. |
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HIGHLIGHT Natural Acts: A Sidelong
View of Nature Quammen, David Norton PB 9780393333602 $24.95 A revised
and expanded edition of the popular book of David Quammen’s lively writings
about science and nature. |
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HIGHLIGHT The Secret Life of Birds Tudge, Colin Penguin PB 9780141034768 $26.95 A lifelong
bird enthusiast explores the lives of some of our most extraordinary fellow
creatures with authority and wry humour. |
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HIGHLIGHT We Need to Talk about Kelvin Chown, Marcus Faber PB 9780571244027
$30.00 An
accessible exploration of the science of the everyday world from New
Scientist writer, Marcus Chown. NB: December release. |
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HIGHLIGHT A
World Without Bees: The mysterious decline of the honeybees and what it means for us Benjamin, Alison & McCallum, Brian Guardian Books PB 9780852651315 $24.95 Honeybees
are dying. Here, two keen amateur apiarists investigate the situation and ask
whether there is any possible way of saving the species. |