Sunday, August 31, 2025

New Titles

 


1) Cheke, Robert A. and Clive F. Mann. Sunbirds of the World: Sunbirds, Flowerpeckers, Spiderhunters and Sugarbirds, Second Edition. 2025. Helm. Hardbound: 608 pages. Price: 

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Sunbirds are among the most striking of all bird groups; their dazzling iridescent plumage and long curved bills are conspicuous when the birds visit garden flowers on sunny days to feed on nectar. Some species - especially the females - are duller in appearance and harder to spot, feeding mostly on insects high up in forest canopies. Spiderhunters, as their name suggests, feed extensively on spiders, while sunbirds' other close relatives, the flowerpeckers, are especially partial to mistletoe berries.

     This book is the last word on sunbird identification, ecology and behaviour. Now in its second edition, it has been fully revised and updated to reflect the many developments that have occurred in sunbird taxonomy, as well as the new research that has been published on their biology. It covers all 218 currently recognised species, providing details of key identification features, voice, habitat, distribution, conservation status, movements, food and behaviour. New colour art by award-winning artist Richard Allen has been added, and hundreds of high-quality colour photographs beautifully capture every species. Maps accurately depict geographical distributions of each taxon to subspecies level.

     This beautiful book is the definitive reference to the sunbirds, flowerpeckers, spiderhunters and sugarbirds of the world, and is essential reading for researchers, birders and conservationists alike.

RECOMMENDATION: The page count has increased from 384 to 608.The number of color plates has increased from 48 to 58. This book is a MUST-HAVE for anyone with an interest in Sunbirds and related birds and/or collects bird family monographs. 

 

 


 

2) Dijkstra, Klaas-Douwe B.. Dragonflies and Damselflies of the World: A Guide to Their Diversity. 2025. Princeton University Press. Hardbound: 256 pages. Price:

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Airily dancing over rivers and ponds, the thousands of colorful dragonfly and damselfly species that cohabit our planet may seem of little importance. Few life-forms, however, convey the condition of the most limiting resource on land and life’s most bountiful environment as well as they can: while the adults are exceptional aerial hunters, their nymphs are all confined to freshwater. Dragonflies and Damselflies of the World showcases their beauty and diversity while shedding light on how they evolved into the vital symbols of planetary health we celebrate today.

  • Features stunning color photos of hundreds of species
  • Characterizes all families and major subgroups
  • Explores how their unique features and behavior led to today’s variety
  • Shows how we contribute to their popularization and protection

RECOMMENDATION: This book is a well illustrated overview of the World's dragonflies and damselflies.  

 


 

 

3) Wilbraham, Joanna. Mosses, Liverworts, and Hornworts of the World: A Guide to Every Order. 2025. Princeton University Press. Hardbound: 240 pages. Price:

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Bryophytes are a highly diverse group of plants found in nearly all parts of the world and across a range of habitats. The term “bryophyte” describes plants of three closely related lineages: the mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Ancient in their makeup, bryophytes disperse by spores rather than seeds and grow no more than a few centimeters high, carpeting forest floors or clinging to rocks and tree trunks. Instead of conducting fluids internally (like vascular plants), they absorb water and nutrients externally across the whole body of the plant. Such strategies have enabled bryophytes to survive, and indeed thrive, through the millennia. Mosses, Liverworts, and Hornworts of the World makes sense of their miniature world, differentiating between the three lineages and delving into their evolution, anatomy, and life cycles. The result is an unprecedented in-depth look at these exquisitely beautiful and often overlooked organisms.

  • Features hundreds of stunning color photos of mosses, liverworts, and hornworts
  • Profiles individual genera across the three groups, including fact boxes and distribution maps
  • Written by a world-renowned expert
RECOMMENDATION: This book is a well illustrated overview of the World's bryophytes.

Sunday, July 27, 2025

New Titles

 


1) Gregory, Phil. Birds of New Guinea Including Bismarck Archipelago and Bougainville (Second Edition). 2025. Lynx Nature Books. Flexibound: 477 pages. Price: 46.50 Euros (about $54.36 U.S.).

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY:  New Guinea is a biodiversity hotspot teeming with an extraordinary diversity of bird species, including a remarkable number of endemics found nowhere else on Earth. This field guide provides the most comprehensive and up-to-date overview of the region’s avifauna, covering the entire New Guinea region, including Indonesian West Papua, Papua New Guinea, and their associated islands such as the Bismarcks, Bougainville, the Aru Islands and others.

     This fully revised second edition incorporates the latest scientific knowledge, including taxonomic updates, new distribution data and insights into identification and vocalisations. It features extensively updated species accounts, newly revised range maps and over 1,800 high-quality illustrations depicting birds in various plumages, including males, females, juveniles and birds in flight.

     New Guinea is home to some of the world’s most iconic and sought-after birds, from the dazzling birds of paradise and bowerbirds to an astonishing variety of pigeons, parrots, kingfishers and honeyeaters. This guide is an essential resource for birders, ornithologists and naturalists eager to explore the incredible avian diversity of this fascinating region.

RECOMMENDATION: The page count has increased from 464 to 477. Also available as a hardbound book. This book is a MUST-HAVE for anyone birding New Guinea!

 


2) McMullan, Miles et al.. Field Guide to the Birds of North America. 2025. Pelagic Publishing. Paperback: 360 pages. Price: $

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Field Guide to the Birds of North America is a complete, compact and user-friendly guide to all the birds of the USA and Canada (excluding Hawaii). Drawing on years of guiding experience, the book is perfectly designed for use in the field.

     Pocket-sized and at just 372 pages, it covers 1,100 species – more than any other guide to North America – and includes over 6,000 illustrations. Distribution ranges of all native birds are mapped, and many confusing subspecies are included for the first time in a field guide for the region. The book gives special attention to the key differences between troublesome species, with comparisons to help the reader get to the right identification.

     Compact and comprehensive, this new field guide includes: 

- Color-coded maps showing resident and seasonal distributions to help plan which birds to expect when and where.
- ‘What’s the difference?’ information boxes providing easy guidance on the most challenging species to identify.
- Conservation and abundance status, with subspecies separately mapped.
- Current taxonomic order and up-to-date common names.

     The clearly labelled illustrations detail plumage variations by sex, age and color morphs. Birds are illustrated in flight, in profile and in typical habitats. Concise descriptive captions highlight the most important field identification signs, including habitat, nesting and feeding behavior. Calls are described for every species.

     Written and illustrated by a professional birding guide with decades of experience, Field Guide to the Birds of North America is a must-have book for birders of all ages and any level of experience.

RECOMMENDATION: This guide is trying to be the Collins Birds of Europe for North America, but I still prefer the Sibley and National Geographic guides over this one. 

 

 


3) Benkman, CraigCrossbills and Conifers: One Million Years of Adaptation and Coevolution. 2025. Pelagic Publishing. Hardbound: 210 pages. Price: $90.00 U.S.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Crossbills and Conifers explores an intimate natural historical connection, revealing why crossbills have become an exemplar of diversification and coevolution. Craig Benkman takes readers on his 40-year journey of research and discovery, exploring a series of unique and interrelated findings about the behavior, ecology, evolution and conservation of a remarkable group of birds.

     Key to revealing these insights is the ease with which one can measure how variation in bill structure, and conifer cone structure and phenology, influence the efficiency at which crossbills extract seeds from cones. Consumer-resource interactions are fundamental to much of ecology, but such relationships are rarely so readily quantified, not least with the coevolutionary arms race driving the evolution of the newly discovered Cassia Crossbill.

     This accessible and handsomely illustrated book will appeal to a wide audience. Students of ornithology and evolutionary biology will gain a greater understanding of the value of natural history and especially the utility of knowing when who eats whom and why. Bird enthusiasts and naturalists will learn much about the world of crossbills, the causes of their diversity which has challenged and inspired many ornithologists, and the threats that these birds face.

RECOMMENDATION: To me this title seems like a modern version of Nethersole-Thompson's "Pine Crossbills" from 1975. I think crossbill researchers will want this book, but at $90.00 U.S. for the hardbound version, I think most will wait for the paperback due out in July 2026 at $42.00 U.S.

 

 


 

4) Sweeney, Chris. The Feather Detective: Mystery, Mayhem, and the Magnificent Life of Roxie Laybourne. 2025. Avid Reader Press. Hardbound: 320 pages. Price: $

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: The fascinating and remarkable true story of the world’s first forensic ornithologist—Roxie Laybourne, who broke down barriers for women, solved murders, and investigated deadly airplane crashes with nothing more than a microscope and a few fragments of feathers.

     In 1960, an Eastern Airlines flight had no sooner lifted from the runway at Boston Logan Airport when it struck a flock of birds and took a nosedive into the shallow waters of the Boston Harbor, killing sixty-two people. This was the golden age of commercial airflight—luxury in the skies—and safety was essential to the precarious future of air travel. So the FAA instructed the bird remains be sent to the Smithsonian Institution for examination, where they would land on the desk of the only person in the world equipped to make sense of it all.

     Her name was Roxie Laybourne, a diminutive but singular woman with thick glasses, a heavy Carolina drawl, and a passion for birds. Roxie didn’t know it at the time, but that box full of dead birds marked the start of a remarkable scientific journey. She became the world’s first forensic ornithologist, investigating a range of crimes and calamities on behalf of the FBI, the US Air Force, and even NASA.

     The Feather Detective takes readers deep within the vaunted backrooms of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History to tell the story of a burgeoning science and the enigmatic woman who pioneered it. While her male colleagues in taxidermy embarked on expeditions around the world and got plum promotions, Roxie stayed with her birds. Using nothing more than her microscope and bits of feathers, she helped prosecute murderers, kidnappers, and poachers. When she wasn’t testifying in court or studying evidence from capital crimes, she was helping aerospace engineers and Air Force crews as they raced to bird-proof their airplanes before disaster struck again.

     In
The Feather Detective, award-winning journalist Chris Sweeney charts the astonishing life and work of this overlooked pioneer. Once divorced, once widowed, and sometimes surly, Roxie shattered stereotypes and pushed boundaries. Her story is one of persistence and grit, obsession and ingenuity. Drawing on reams of archival material, court documents, and exclusive interviews, Sweeney delivers a moving and amusing portrait of a woman who overcame cultural and scientific obstacles at every turn, forever changing our understanding of birds—and the feathers they leave behind.
RECOMMENDATION: This book is a must-read for anyone with an interest in this aspect of ornithological history.
 

5) Deutsch, Owen and Michael J. Parr. Birds of the Tropical Andes. 2025. Princeton University Press. Hardbound: 264 pages. Price: $
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Spanning much of the western part of South America, the Andes are home to some of the world’s most magnificent birds, from exquisite hummingbirds to fabulous flamingos. This beautifully illustrated large-format book celebrates the splendor and extraordinary diversity of Andean birds and the habitats they depend on. It draws on the latest findings from the field and sheds light on the lush alpine and forested terrains that make this avifauna so rich and plentiful. With illuminating essays that share invaluable perspectives from some of the region’s leading bird conservationists, Birds of the Tropical Andes takes readers from the Pacific coast to the jungles of the Amazon, crossing peaks and high plains in search of spectacular birdlife.
  • Lavishly illustrated with a wealth of photographs
  • Tours the vast array of habitats that comprise the Andean mountains
  • Covers every major ecosystem and its abundant birdlife
  • Profiles representative species, including the rarest and most sought after
  • Discusses the region’s unique geology and Indigenous culture
  • A must for birders, ecotravelers, and armchair naturalists
RECOMMENDATION: The photography highlights this book! 
 

 
 
6) Holliday, Steve and Gill Holliday. Wildlife of the Eastern Caribbean. 2025. Princeton University Press. Flexibound: 320 pages. Price: $
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: This is the first photographic field identification guide to Eastern Caribbean birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles, land crabs, dragonflies, and butterflies. Beautiful and easy-to-use, the guide covers 17 island groups stretching from the Virgin Islands south through the Lesser Antilles, from Anguilla to Grenada, where a unique range of flora and fauna evolved in relative isolation. Around 30 percent of all the species included are endemic to the region. For each island group there is a list of endemic and “don’t miss” species, alongside suggested sites to visit; site accessibility is indicated where possible.

     Whether you live in the Eastern Caribbean or are visiting, this is an indispensable guide to the spectacular wildlife of its beautiful islands.

  • Covers all the birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles, land crabs, dragonflies, and butterflies that are likely to be seen, and includes an introduction to each group
  • Features more than 420 species and over 850 stunning color photos
  • Species accounts highlight key identification features and information on distribution and habitat preferences
  • Includes richly illustrated introductory sections with maps and habitat information
  • Details conservation status and actions for more than 100 globally threatened species
RECOMMENDATION: This book is a must-have for any naturalist with an interest in the region! 
 

 
 
7) Eaton, Eric R.. Bugwatching: The Art, Joy, and Importance of Observing Insects. 2025. Princeton University Press. Paperback: 180 pages. Price: 
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Insects are the most abundant wildlife on the planet—but also the least observed. This incisive field companion highlights the basic tools for watching insects with all of our senses, covers some best habitats and circumstances for seeing the most diversity, and shares tips for attracting desirable insects to your yard and garden. With wonderful illustrations by Samantha Gallagher, Bugwatching explains why this rewarding activity is for everyone, regardless of age, ethnicity, gender identity, level of affluence, ability, or disability. When you become a bugwatcher, you join a community of supportive and energetic people. The potential for personal and scientific discovery is virtually limitless.
  • Enables you to better appreciate and understand insects and improve your success rate in finding, watching, and identifying them
  • Includes a comprehensive treatment of insect behaviors that is invaluable for beginners
  • Discusses social bugwatching and participation in community science projects
  • Covers advanced topics such as rearing insects and using keys to identify them
  • Explains how watching insects can fill gaps in our knowledge about their economic impacts and the growing decline in insect diversity and abundance
  • Promotes safety, accessibility, and inclusion as vital aspects of watching insects
  • An essential guide for seasoned bugwatchers and newcomers to the community
 RECOMMENDATION: A well illustrated introduction to the subject.
 
 

 
Holt, NathaliaThe Beast in the Clouds: The Roosevelt Brothers' Deadly Quest to Find the Mythical Giant Panda. 2025. Atria/One Signal Publishers. Hardbound: 265 pages. Price: $
PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: For lovers of history, nature, and adventure, the stunning true story of Theodore Roosevelt’s sons and their 1929 Himalayan expedition to prove the existence of the beishung, the panda bear, to the western world, from the New York Times bestselling author of Rise of the Rocket Girls.

     The Himalayas—a snowcapped mountain range that hides treacherous glacier crossings, raiders poised to attack unsuspecting travelers, and air so thin that even seasoned explorers die of oxygen deprivation. Yet among the dangers lies one of the most beautiful and fragile ecosystems in the world.

     During the 1920s, dozens of expeditions scoured the Chinese and Tibetan wilderness in search of the panda bear, a beast that many believed did not exist. When the two eldest sons of President Theodore Roosevelt sought the bear in 1928, they had little hope of success. Together with a team of scientists and naturalists, they accomplished what a decade of explorers could not, ultimately introducing the panda to the West. In the process, they documented a vanishing world and set off a new era of conservation biology.

     Along the way, the Roosevelt expedition faced an incredible series of hardships as they disappeared in a blizzard, were attacked by robbers, overcome by sickness and disease, and lost their food supply in the mountains. The explorers would emerge transformed, although not everyone would survive.
Beast in the Clouds brings alive these extraordinary events in a potent nonfiction thriller featuring the indomitable Roosevelt family.

     From the soaring beauty of the Tibetan plateau to the somber depths of human struggle, Nathalia Holt brings her signature “immersive, evocative” (
Bookreporter) voice to this astonishing tale of adventure, harrowing defeat, and dazzling success.
RECOMMENDATION: This book is a must-read for anyone with an interest in Giant Pandas and/or the Roosevelt family. 
 
 

Sunday, June 29, 2025

New Titles

 


1) Birkhead,TimThe Great Auk: Its Extraordinary Life, Hideous Death and Mysterious Afterlife. 2025. Bloomsbury Sigma. Hardbound: 288 pages. Price: $

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: The Great Auk was a flightless, goose-sized bird superbly adapted for life at sea. Fat, flush with feathers and easy to capture, the birds were in trouble whenever sailors visited their once-remote breeding colonies. Places like Funk Island, off north-east Newfoundland, became scenes of unimaginable slaughter, with birds killed in their millions. By 1800 the auks of Funk Island were gone. A scramble by private collectors for specimens of the final few birds then began, a bloody, unthinking destruction of one of the world's most extraordinary species.

     But their extinction in 1844 wasn't the end of the Great Auk story, as the bird went on to have a remarkable afterlife; skins, eggs and skeletons became the focus for dozens of collectors in a story of pathological craving and unscrupulous dealings that goes on to this day.

     In a book rich with insight and packed with tales of birds and of people, Tim Birkhead reveals previously unimagined aspects of the bird's life before humanity, its death on the killing shores of the North Atlantic, and the unrelenting subsequent quest for its remains.

     The Great Auk remains a symbol of human folly and the necessity of conservation. This book tells its story.

RECOMMENDATION: This book is a MUST-READ for anyone with an interest in the Great Auk and/or enjoys Birkhead's writing! 

 

 


 

2) Talbott Roché, Cindy et al.. Field Guide to the Grasses of Oregon and Washington (Second Edition). 2025. Oregon State University Press. Paperback: 486 pages. Price: $

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: As the comprehensive reference for 394 species, subspecies, and varieties of grasses, Field Guide to the Grasses of Oregon and Washington has become the definitive identification resource for amateurs and professionals alike throughout the region. With 18 additional species, updated names, new keys, and improved photos and maps, the second edition provides an in-depth and refreshed treatment of both native and introduced grasses that grow wild in Oregon and Washington and their neighboring states and provinces.

     This guide covers the entire spectrum of grasses, from weedy invaders to rare native species. It shows how grasses are valued for habitat restoration in numerous environments—from wetlands to deserts, and from sea level to alpine. Field Guide to the Grasses of Oregon and Washington provides identification keys, species descriptions, photographs of each species (both in the field and through a microscope), habitats, and range maps. Users will especially appreciate the labeled macrophotographs that illustrate hard-to-see diagnostic features.

     Biologists, land managers, botanists, and consultants, as well as plant professionals, home gardeners, and amateur plant enthusiasts, will find this guide an indispensable reference for identifying all the grasses encountered in the diverse habitats of Oregon and Washington. 

RECOMMENDATION: This book is a MUST-HAVE for those with a serious interest in the grasses of the region! 

 

 

 

Sunday, May 25, 2025

New Titles

 


1) Broughton, Richard. The Marsh Tit and The Willow Tit. 2025. T & AD Poyser. Flexibound: 304 pages. Price: $

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: The Marsh Tit and the Willow Tit are two small birds of woodlands and forests extending from Great Britain to Japan. They are resourceful, resilient, vocal and bold. Both species are an important part of our natural heritage and are sentinels of our wooded ecosystems, sensitive to habitat changes that send their populations into decline and signalling problems in these precious habitats.

     In this first monograph for either species, Richard Broughton reveals the intricacies of the remarkable lives of these birds, bringing together decades of personal study and a detailed review of the wider research from Europe and Asia. We learn about each species' taxonomy, communication, food and foraging patterns, habitats, social organisation, breeding behaviour and dispersal, as well as exploring the challenges they face and their future prospects.

     With more than 150 illustrations, including unique maps, charts and colour photographs,
The Marsh Tit and The Willow Tit brings together a wealth of information surrounding these fascinating species and considers how we can better understand and conserve them.

RECOMMENDATION: This book is a MUST-HAVE for those with a serious interest in this pair of tits! 

 


 

2) Strange, Morten. A Photographic Guide to the Birds of Indonesia: Updated Second Edition. 2025. Tuttle Publishing. Flexibound: 544 pages. Price: $

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: A Photographic Guide to the Birds of Indonesia is the most extensive photographic reference available for Indonesia's incredible birdlife.

     Home to the world's most diverse avifauna, Indonesia's vast size and unique geography make it a premier destination for bird-watching enthusiasts. With over 1,600 species—including 235 rare species found nowhere else—Indonesia is a treasure trove for nature lovers.

     This field guide profiles 912 species, featuring concise descriptions and photographs for each, including most non-migratory and endemic species, as well as numerous threatened and endangered birds. Every entry includes a detailed distribution map, while the updated edition showcases nearly 100 newly added or improved photographs, carefully chosen to highlight each bird's defining features.

     Designed for accessibility and ease of use, the guide also includes an index of common names, making it an essential companion for bird enthusiasts exploring Indonesia's extraordinary wildlife.
 
 
RECOMMENDATION: I see this book as a useful supplement to the standard field guides to the region.



3) Milton, Nicholas. The Birdman of Auschwitz: The Life of Günther Niethammer, the Ornithologist Seduced by the Nazis. 2024. Pen and Sword History. Hardbound: 225 pages. Price: $

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: When Soviet troops were liberating Auschwitz concentration camp in January 1945 among the piles of half burnt corpses and emaciated prisoners left behind, they were amazed to find nesting boxes for birds. The same boxes were found in the walled garden at the house of Rudolf Hoess, the notorious camp commandant. In his safe, they also discovered a research paper on the birds of Auschwitz with a personal dedication. It read ‘I owe this to the great understanding which the commandant of Konzentrationslager Auschwitz, SS-Sturmbannführer Höß, gave to the scientific development of this area and the research tasks that the German expansion in the East brings with it.’

     The nesting boxes and research paper belonged to one of the most erudite but naive guards ever to serve at the camp, Dr. Günther Niethammer. On his arrival in 1940 Niethammer’s passion for birds soon became known throughout Auschwitz and led to him being assigned to ‘special duties’ by Hoess. So instead of guard duties, Niethammer shot game to order for commandant and conducted the most infamous bird survey of all time.

     Turning a blind eye to the heinous treatment of the prisoners and the extermination of the Jews, Niethammer instead shot birds and created a macabre museum of bird skins at the camp working with one of the inmates. After leaving Auschwitz, he carried out further bird surveys in occupied Crete, Bulgaria, and Italy. When the war was finally over Niethammer was put on trial but spent just 3 years in prison before returning to the Museum Koenig where his career, although tainted by association with Auschwitz, still flourished until his death in 1974.

     This is the story of the one of the greatest ornithologists of his generation who was seduced by the Nazis and became 'The Birdman of Auschwitz'.

RECOMMENDATION: This book is a must-read for anyone with an interest in World War 2 and/or ornithological history!

 


4) Aulagnier, Stéphane et al.. Field Guide to Mammals of Europe, North Africa and the Middle East: Third Edition. 2025. Bloomsbury Wildlife. Paperback: 320 pages. Price:

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Fully revised and updated, this major work presents all species that occur in the Western Palearctic, serving as the perfect field guide to the great diversity of mammals in the region. This new edition presents 86 new species, including 40 cetaceans, and reports on the latest scientific advances and taxonomic changes.

     Species accounts are concise and authoritative, giving information on size, distribution, habitat, behaviour, reproduction and feeding. Each account is supported by distribution maps and superb colour illustrations. The book features over 125 plates, comprising more than 650 colour species artworks. Variation between the sexes is illustrated, and anatomical diagrams including tooth arrays are provided to assist identification.

     Field Guide to Mammals of Europe, North Africa and the Middle East is the only guide you'll need to identify any mammal across the Western Palearctic.

RECOMMENDATION: This book is a MUST-HAVE for anyone with an interest in European mammals!

 


5) Witton, Mark P.. King Tyrant: A Natural History of Tyrannosaurus rex. 2025. Princeton University Press. Hardbound: 310 pages. Price:

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Tyrannosaurus rex is the world’s favorite dinosaur, adored by the public and the subject of intense study and debate by paleontologists. This stunningly illustrated book brings together everything we have learned about T. rex—the “King of the Tyrant Lizards”—since it was first given its famous name in 1905. It presents these creatures as science knows them rather than the version portrayed in movies, revealing them to be dramatically different, and far more amazing, than ever imagined. With numerous original paintings and diagrams by the author, King Tyrant draws on the latest discoveries to offer a modern understanding of Tyrannosaurus, pulling back the curtain of media hype that often obscures these extraordinary extinct animals while cementing their reputation as the most formidable carnivores of the Mesozoic.

  • Features more than 150 breathtaking illustrations, photos, and diagrams
  • Covers everything from the research history of T. rex to their anatomy, physiology, biomechanics, behavior, and extinction
  • Reveals how the Tyrannosaurus known to science is characterized as much by radical changes in body form throughout its growth as its enormous size and powerful jaws
  • Discloses details about their lifestyles and behavior evidenced from fossils, from violent face-biting between rivals to their capacity to literally pull the heads off Triceratops carcasses
  • Gets to the bottom of the many controversies surrounding T. rex, such as: Was there really more than one species of Tyrannosaurus? Did they live and hunt in groups? How fast could they run and how hard could they bite? Can we truly distinguish males from females?
  • Discusses T. rex in popular culture, showing how our love for this dinosaur has both helped and hindered research

RECOMMENDATION: This book is a MUST-HAVE for anyone with an interest in T. rex!



 

 

6) Kuper, Peter. Insectopolis: A Natural History. 2025. W. W. Norton. Hardbound: 256 pages. Price:

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY: Award-winning cartoonist Peter Kuper transports readers through the 400-million-year history of insects and the remarkable entomologists who have studied them.

     This visually immersive work of graphic nonfiction dives into a world where ants, cicadas, bees, and butterflies visit a library exhibition that displays their stories and humanity’s connection to them throughout the ages. Kuper’s thrilling visual feast layers history and science, color and design, to tell the remarkable tales of dung beetles navigating by the stars, hawk-size prehistoric dragonflies hunting prey, and mosquitoes changing the course of human history.

     Kuper also illuminates pioneering naturalists, from well-known figures like E. O. Wilson and Rachel Carson to unheralded luminaries like Charles Henry Turner, the Black American scholar who documented arthropod intelligence, and Maria Sybilla Merian, the seventeenth-century German regarded as the mother of entomology.

     Galvanized by the sixth extinction and the ongoing insect crisis, Kuper takes readers on an unforgettable journey.

RECOMMENDATION: There's a companion coloring book for this title for $18.99 U.S.. This graphic novel would be a good way to introduce children and the general public to entomological history.