Author:Gordon Grice
Consider, if you can, the case of Jacob Fowler, who heard what he thought was the sound of his own skull cracking between the jaws of a grizzly bear - only to discover that it was.
Or the Arizonan jogger who ran a mile back to her car with a rabid fox clamped to her arm before driving to hospital for live-saving inoculations. Or the woman who was attacked by a hyena, dragged from her tent by her face and survived to tell of her ordeal.
The dangers of the animal kingdom are the stuff of legend but the reality of man's vulnerability and of nature's savage power is far more various, improbable and chilling than even the most active imagination would fear. In this unique work of nature writing, you will encounter the most formidable predators on land and sea - as well as the most overlooked, bizarre and inventive hazards that mother nature has to offer. Meet the cougar that can leap 40 feet and clear 8-foot fences with a fully-grown deer in its jaws, the tapeworm that's been known to grow as long as 82 feet in the human gut and the elephant that single-handedly destroyed an oil tanker.
Drawing on an enormous host of true encounters between man and beast, this is the world's most authoritative compendium of animal attacks on human beings. With mordant wit and expert timing, Gordon Grice provides a gripping journey to the dark side of the animal kingdom and a celebration of its humbling, savage glory.
(Originally published in hardback as The Book of Deadly Animals.)
This book is the serious, adult, hardback equivalent of that splendid programme [Deadly 60] ... a work of mountainous, vertiginous research, a 350-page volume in which scarcely a word is wasted. This review can barely scratch the surface of its wonders
—— Daily MailThrillingly scary .... Though I can imagine this book making a perfect stocking filler for adolescent boys, it's also a beautifully-written, well-researched work
—— Mail on SundayA wonderful, slightly terrifying, utterly captivating encounter with the animal world - not quite like anything I've ever read before. I think the only way I could possibly have enjoyed this more is if I happened to be an adventurous twelve-year-old boy, but still, even for a fully domesticated forty-year-old woman, it was both a thrill and an education
—— Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat Pray LoveWhen it comes to the most deadly animals on the planet it is best to be prepared. With The Book of Deadly Animals forewarned is forearmed!
—— Bear GryllsGordon Grice treats his deadly subject with wit and wry humour, but he does not sensationalise it ... His anecdotes include personal encounters with cougars, black widow spiders and a mouse that defecated in his strawberry pie
—— IndependentA must for anyone even remotely thinking of getting a monkey, a sea lion, or, heaven forbid, a dog
—— David SedarisA fresh, strange, and wonderful new voice in nature writing
—— Michael PollanA lovely little book. After all we've done to them it's great to see the animals getting their own back
—— Tony Fitzjohn, author of Born WildI wolfed it down
—— Will Self on The Red HourglassFirst-rate, unsentimental writing about nature and about the ways that human beings try to cope with the most terrible cruelties that nature offers up
—— The New York TimesElegant and wryly funny
—— EsquireThe most polymathic science writer of our time
—— Peter Forbes , Independent, Books of the YearAn engaging and lively account of an endlessly curious man
—— IndependentA fascinating window into the complex emergent urban future. This book is an extremely sophisticated, often devastatingly witty and ironic, interpretation of what is possible over the next two decades
—— Saskia Sassen (author of TERRITORY, AUTHORITY, RIGHTS)Throw out your old atlas. The new version is here
—— Walter Kirn (author of UP IN THE AIR)Kasarda ... and Lindsay convincingly put the airport at the centre of modern urban life
—— EconomistHighly recommended
—— Library Journal