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Zoobiquity
Zoobiquity
Oct 6, 2024 5:30 PM

Author:Barbara Natterson Horowitz,Kathryn Bowers

Zoobiquity

Concerns about the recent explosions of diseases like HIV, the West Nile Virus, and other avian and swine flus that originate in animals have encouraged new efforts on a global scale to bridge the gap between animal and human medicine for the benefit of both. Zoobiquity is the first book to explore many of the human and animal health issues that overlap and provides new insight into the treatment of many diseases including diabetes, cancer, heart disease and mental illness.

But Zoobiquity is even bigger than health and academic medicine, and encompasses much more than our diseases and how to cure them. It sheds light on the evolution of hierarchies and similarities between a tribe of apes and a Fortune 500 company. It suggests that the ways we run our political and justice systems may overlap with how animals protect and defend their territories - and that examining this possibility in a scientifically credible way could help strengthen our institutions. It dangles the possibility that human parenting could be informed by a greater knowledge and respect for how our animal cousins solve issues of childcare, sibling rivalry and infertility.

Reviews

Fascinating reading about the similarities in both physiology and behaviour of people and animals

—— Temple Grandin

Zoobiquity is full of fascinating stories of intersection between human and nonhuman medicine - fish that faint; dinosaur cancers; human treatments that cure dogs of melanoma; lessons from adolescent elephant behaviour that explain human teenagers. I was beguiled

—— Atul Gawande, M.D.

Zoobiquity will alter our view of the human condition ... an amazing new book

—— The Sunday Times

Sprackland has a wonderfully curious eye

—— Financial Times

Simply gorgeous ... One of the finest piece of writing, nature or otherwise, to emerge this year

—— Big Issue

If a book can have the appeal of a really good long walk, this one does

—— Daily Mail

Lovely travelogue

—— Metro

Elegant

—— Economist

A delightful book

—— Sally Morris , Daily Mail

This book may be exactly what's needed to increase science literacy for readers of all ages

—— Publishers Weekly

This book is primarily aimed at teenagers, but plenty of adults will get a kick out of it too...McKean's drawings bring the text to life brilliantly ... Dawkins writes convincingly about everything from chemistry to statistics

—— Independent on Sunday

Dawkins uses a simple, brilliant technique highly appealing to young and old

—— The Washington Post

Few scientists manage to reach a huge popular audience. Even among them Richard Dawkins is distinctive for the clarity and elegance of his prose. The Magic of Reality... will be appreciated by inquisitive children while illuminating much for the adult general reader.

—— The Times

This is not a book about the end of the world but about an imagined beginning ...The results of this huge thought-experiment are both fascinating and surprising. Fascinating for what they tell us about the impermanence of the works of man, and surprising for the simple reason that it soon becomes clear that our world would carry on regardless, indifferent to our demise

—— Daily Mail

Weisman's gripping fantasy will make most readers hope that at least some of us can stick around long enough to see how it all turns out

—— New York Times

Engrossing

—— New York Magazine

An idea that is so lateral and clever, so powerfully evocative and masterfully executed that the only appropriate response is fervent envy

—— New Statesman

A wonderful idea ... a hugely enjoyable and thought-provoking book

—— Scotsman

Fascinating, absorbing

—— Good Book Guide

A quick, absorbing read - a summer beach book with brains

—— Bloomberg

If you can stomach only one end-of-the world-as-we-know it story this summer, none is more audacious or interesting than Alan Weisman's The World Without Us

—— The Boston Globe

His is an extraordinary story laced with tragedy

—— Mail on Sunday

[Root's] life story, vividly related here, is crammed with incident and adventure. Curious, creative and fearless, he has diced with death on numerous occasions and been mauled several times in his efforts to capture the daily lives of everything from silver-back gorillas to leopards in the wild on film. A gripping account of a life well lived

—— Good Book Guide
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