Author:Hugh Aldersey-Williams
The Sunday Times Science Book of the Year, Anatomies by Hugh Aldersey-Williams, author of bestseller Periodic Tales, is a splendidly entertaining journey through the art, science, literature and history of the human body.
'Magnificent, inspired. He writes like a latter-day Montaigne. Stimulating scientific hypotheses, bold philosophic theories, illuminating quotations and curious facts. I recommend it to all' Telegraph *****
'Splendid, highly entertaining, chock-full of insights ... It inserts fascinating scientific snippets and anecdotes about our organs into the wider history of our changing understanding of our bodies' Sunday Times
'A relentlessly entertaining cultural history of the human body ... brims with fascinating details, infectious enthusiasm ... the terrain he covers is so richly brought to life' Guardian
'Elegant and informative ... For Aldersey-Williams, [the body] is a thing of wonder and a repository of fascinating facts' Mail on Sunday ****
In Anatomies, bestselling author Hugh Aldersey-Williams investigates that marvellous, mysterious form: the human body. Providing a treasure trove of surprising facts, remarkable stories and startling information drawn from across history, science, art and literature - from finger-prints to angel physiology, from Isaac Newton's death-mask to the afterlife of Einstein's brain - he explores our relationship with our bodies and investigates our changing attitudes to the extraordinary physical shell we inhabit.
'More than a science book - it's also history, biography and autobiography - Anatomies is writing at its most refined, regardless of genre' Sunday Times
Praise for Periodic Tales:
'Science writing at its best ... fascinating and beautiful ... if only chemistry had been like this at school ... to meander through the periodic table with him ... is like going round a zoo with Gerald Durrell ... a rich compilation of delicious tales, but it offers greater rewards, too' Matt Ridley
'Immensely engaging and continually makes one sit up in surprise' Sunday Times
'Splendid ... enjoyable and polished' Observer
'Full of good stories and he knows how to tell them well ... an agreeable jumble of anecdote, reflection and information' Sunday Telegraph
'Great fun to read and an endless fund of unlikely and improbable anecdotes ... sharp and often witty' Financial Times
Hugh Aldersey-Williams studied natural sciences at Cambridge. He is the author of several books exploring science, design and architecture and has curated exhibitions at the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Wellcome Collection. His previous book Periodic Tales: The Curious Lives of the Elements was a Sunday Times bestseller and has been published in many languages around the world. He lives in Norfolk with his wife and son.
Magnificent, inspired. Stimulating scientific hypotheses, bold philosophic theories, illuminating quotations and curious facts. I recommend it to all
—— Daily TelegraphChock-full of insights, rich in detail. Inserts fascinating scientific snippets and anecdotes about our organs into the wider history of our changing understanding of our bodies
—— The Sunday TimesBrims with fascinating details, infectious enthusiasm . . . the terrain he covers is so richly brought to life
—— GuardianElegant and informative. A thing of wonder and a repository of fascinating facts
—— Mail on SundayHighly recommended
—— Daily ExpressIt could not be more rigorously researched, more elegantly delivered, or more timely. We need such big thinking for our own sakes and those of our children. Bring on the wolves and whales, I say, and, in the words of Maurice Sendak, let the wild rumpus start
—— Philip Hoare , Sunday Telegraph (Book of the Week)This is prose style as auditory experience; what majesty the eye notes in the landscape is echoed in the vocabulary. ... This is nature writing prepared to go off at a tangent when it needs to, prepared to explore the byways of our passions. Yes, there is a wildness here and it's a welcome one
—— IndependentIncredible. Apparently there are more friendly bacteria inside my intestine than cells in my own body.
—— Penny SmithAn informative and entertaining introduction to the human body for all the family.
—— Good Book GuideBirds and People is primarily a way of looking at our own complex history, through the prism of nature. It is also a beautiful volume, not least because of David Tipling’s excellent photographs… The results are stunning.
—— Stephen Moss , Sunday TelegraphPacked with beauty, curiosity, fascination and wonder on every page, Birds and People is probably best not wolfed down but savoured bit by bit. It is a truly exceptional work, soaring in its scope, boundless in its interest, with an ambition matched only by its achievement… Strikes me as the sort of masterpiece that only comes along once or twice a decade.
—— Craig Brown , Mail on SundayA tapestry that is by turns fascinating, delightful, surprising and grim. Birds and People rewards the idle browser and will be an important addition to the shelves of anyone who cares about how we interact with the non-human world or what sort of creatures we are becoming… David Tipling’s photographs…are gorgeous.
—— Caspar Henderson , Literary ReviewA vast, ambitious and surprisingly personal overview of what birds mean to human beings... Birds and People is a dense, weighty delight, to be dipped into again and again as curiosity commands. Written with grace, conscientious stewardship and unfettered love, the book is a transformative look at the feathered dinosaurs that, despite all we have done to them, still grace our fields, forests and skies. Birds and People is an encyclopedia with a heart.
—— Julie Zickefoose , Wall Street JournalA fascinating examination of the relationship between the human and avian worlds… This important book is a clarion call to treasure our birds – or risk losing them forever.
—— Daily MailSumptuous and richly informative.
—— John Carey , Sunday TimesA monumental new account of the role birds play in human life.
—— Patrick Barkham , GuardianThe greatest joy of this great book is that it is unfinishable as well as unputdownable.
—— Brian Morton , HeraldA delightful duet between nature writer Mark Cocker and wildlife photographer David Tipling.
—— Nicky Clayton , NatureBirds and People isn’t just a book for bird enthusiasts, but a thoughtful look at how one seemingly common creature can influence and enrich so much of our lives.
—— UK Regional PressIt’s a project with the ‘wow’ factor – and one that has you reaching for the superlatives.
—— Trevor Heaton , UK Regional Press SyndicationEncyclopedic in content, sumptuous in production and has the gripping, intensive quality of a classic potboiler. This wonderful book should never be confined to a dusty life on a shelf but regarded as a trusty, companion ready to give wise knowledge, faithful service and boundless enjoyment at every opportunity.
—— Stuart Winter , Sunday Express[Cocker’s] magnificent new book is a work of encyclopedic proportion, a labour of love and, in unusual ways, a collaboration – and not just with the photographer David Tipling, whose images are as original and brilliantly distinguished as their feathered subjects.
—— Andrew McNellie , Country LifeSeven years in the making, Birds and People is a doorstep of a book that becomes a lifetime’s investment once owned, revealing many layers of both human and animal nature in the most absorbing of ways. It is as much a work of anthropology as ornithology, and all the better for it. Quite possibly Mark Cocker’s masterpiece.
—— David Callahan , BirdwatchMagnificent… 600 stunningly illustrated and gorgeously produced pages.
—— James Bradley , Nothern TimesVisually rich, historically fascinating and vast in both scope and scale, this is a wonderful addition to any bookcase.
—— Mary Lussiana , Country & Town HouseCocker has collected hundreds of anecdotes that illustrate the relationship between humans and birds… He writes movingly about the part that birds play in our culture.
—— Molly Guinness , SpectatorFor the unashamed bird-lover… A meticulous and caring study of how humans think about, imagine, use, misuse and abuse the most miraculous of our fellow creatures.
—— John Burnside , New StatesmanA magnificently compendious account of the connections (and lack of them) between the human and avian world… a marvellous object too.
—— Andrew Motion , Times Literary SupplementMagisterial.
—— Jim Crace , GuardianBirds and People by Mark Cocker and David Tipling is almost too wonderful a book to give away.
—— John Burnside , ScotsmanMark Cocker’s Birds and People, is 535 pages of text and David Tipling’s luminous photographs: a true magnum opus, revealing the whole ghastly story of man’s long exploitation of our feathered friends.
—— John Lister-Kaye , ScotsmanA remarkable work, taking in every family of birds on earth and the way humans have interacted them.
—— Simon Barnes , The TimesWell laid out and designed and fluidly written, the book seems the best yet on its complex subject.
—— Henry T. Armistead , ScienceThe intricate research of Mark Cocker and the award-winning photography of David Tipling make this incredible feat of research one of the year’s finest examples of outdoor literature. Humanity’s bond with these feathered beasts is explored with such depth that it boggles the mind as to how the author pulled this overwhelming project together with such success.
—— James Reader , The Great Outdoors MagazineThe bird book I never knew I needed until I had it. Far from a reference book, it is full of stories – mythology, folklore, personal tales – and that is what makes it so beguiling.
—— Diane Setterfield , Big IssueMark Cocker has done it again.
—— John Wilkins , TabletAuthoritative yet readable… The definitive book on the subject.
—— Mark Whitley , CountrymanStunning.
—— Gill Lewis , GuardianA sumptuous book full of beautiful photos… It gives you hope that birds will be conserved.
—— Caroline Rees , Daily Express