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An Inordinate Fondness for Beetles

Autor Paul Spencer Sochaczewski
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 apr 2017
An Inordinate Fondness for Beetles follows the Victorian-era explorations of Alfred Russel Wallace through Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia. While Wallace is recognized as co-discoverer of the theory of natural selection (and was perhaps deliberately sidelined by Darwin), he was also an edgy social commentator and a voracious collector of "natural productions"-he caught, skinned, and pickled 125,660 specimens, including 212 new species of birds and 900 new species of beetles. Sochaczewski has created an innovative form of storytelling, combining incisive biography and personal travelogue. He examines themes about which Wallace cared deeply-women's power, why boys leave home, the need to collect, our relationship with other species, humanity's need to control nature and how this leads to nature destruction, arrogance, the role of ego and greed, white-brown and brown-brown colonialism, serendipity, passion, mysticism-and interprets them through his own filter with layers of humor, history, social commentary, and sometimes outrageous personal tales.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9782940573264
ISBN-10: 2940573263
Pagini: 490
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: Explorer's Eye Press

Notă biografică

Paul Spencer Sochaczewski is an award-winning Geneva, Switzerland-based writer and writing coach. While at WWF (World Wide Fund for Nature International), Paul created global public awareness campaigns to protect rainforests and biological diversity, then later developed the WWF Faith and Environment program. Paul has lived and worked in more than 80 countries, including two decades in Southeast Asia. He has written more than 600 bylined articles on conservation, wildlife, orangutan intelligence, and social change for The New York Times, International Herald Tribune, The Wall Street Journal, Travel + Leisure, CNN Traveller, Reader's Digest, and the Royal Geographical Society magazine Geographical. He has written 14 books on subjects ranging from golf (Distant Greens) and speaking with dead people (Dead, But Still Kicking) to a handbook on how to write your personal story (Share Your Journey). In addition, he has written about the nature of Borneo in Malaysia: Heart of Southeast Asia; served on the Editorial Advisory Board for the Indonesian Heritage Encyclopedia; and was project initiator for Tanah Air: Celebrating Indonesia's Biodiversity. He spent 40 years following the Southeast Asian trail of Victorian British naturalist and explorer Alfred Russel Wallace, who developed the Theory of Natural Selection and got usurped by Charles Darwin. For more information, visit Paul's website (www.sochaczewski.com) or his Wikipedia page (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Spencer_Sochaczewski).