Howard Zimmerman
Autore di Strange Coincidences
Sull'Autore
Serie
Opere di Howard Zimmerman
Beyond the Dinosaurs: Sky Dragons Sea Monsters Mega-mammals And Other Prehistoric Beasts (2001) 22 copie
Starlog, June 1981, #47 1 copia
The Best of Starlog 3 1 copia
Opere correlate
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Sesso
- male
Utenti
Recensioni
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 27
- Opere correlate
- 1
- Utenti
- 373
- Popolarità
- #64,664
- Voto
- 3.6
- Recensioni
- 1
- ISBN
- 16
This small book focuses on the natural history of reptiles and amphibians, particularly on unusual species unfamiliar to urban and suburban readers. Only a pedant would note that the title is misleading (lizards and the prehistoric beasts, after all, are reptiles). Accompanied by pen and ink drawings, the information is always presented in tones of breathless astonishment:
”The wood turtle has a whistle that can be heard 40 feet away! “
“Snakes shed their skins 3 to 6 times each year!”
“A mother crocodile transports her babies in her mouth!”
The information is generally accurate, and only occasionally misleading:
“The hairy frog of Africa is covered with fur!” (ok, so it’s not actually fur, but small projections of skin that truly do look rather hairlike.)
“The turtle has not changed in 200 million years!” (true to a point, although most types of turtles [i.e. sea turtles, box turtles, softshell turtles] have evolved much more recently).
“Frogs sang the first love songs on earth, because they were the first to have lungs” (ah, but how about the [admittedly mute] lungfish?)
A few others are true, but actually underestimate their subject:
“The Gila monster is North America’s only poisonous lizard! (more than that, it’s the only poisonous lizard in the world).
“The tuatara, primitive reptile of New Zealand, has a third eye on top of its head!” (quite true, and so do most lizards, and arguably, birds, in the form of their light- sensitive pineal)
Very few are the sort of anecdotes that would arouse suspicions of a herpetologist:
“Three frogs were found in a potato!”
“A snake tied itself into a knot to cure a broken back!”
With curiosity about the natural world having been dulled by computers, television, and urban landscapes, a book such as this has potential to spark a reader’s curiosity about some fascinating yet endangered groups of animals. Overall, this is an amusing and entertaining little book, well - suited for young - minded readers of all ages.… (altro)