The Book of Barely Imagined Beings
A 21st-Century Bestiary
-
- ¥1,600
-
- ¥1,600
Publisher Description
From Axolotl to Zebrafish, discover a host of barely imagined beings: real creatures that are often more astonishing than anything dreamt in the pages of a medieval bestiary. Ranging from the depths of the ocean to the most arid corners of the earth, Caspar Henderson captures the beauty and bizarreness of the many living forms we thought we knew and some we could never have contemplated, inviting us to better imagine the precarious world we inhabit.
A witty, vivid blend of pioneering natural history and spiritual primer, infectiously celebratory about life's sheer ingenuity and variety, The Book of Barely Imagined Beings is a mind-expanding, wonder-inducing read.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Tangentially inspired by Jorge Luis Borges's Book of Imaginary Beings, and assembled like a cabinet of curiosities, journalist Henderson's first book highlights what nonhuman species reveal about being human. The disarmingly human face of the Axolotl salamander introduces a reflection on evolution, which wanders into the history of the Spanish conquest of Mexico, before landing on the question of what the Axolotl's ability to regenerate limbs can reveal about stem cells. It's an oddly anthropomorphic argument to abandon anthropomorphism, but as exotic salamanders and transparent octopi give way to miniscule water bears, whiskered owlets, and the honey badger, Henderson's contagious awe of life effortlessly advances his argument. The captivating habits of these beings are given significant scientific backbone, before digressing into a free-flowing discourse. As Henderson admits, such efforts yield some fairly abstruse connections. The moray eel and its monstrous pharyngeal jaw links easily to our fascination with horrors of the deep, but not as clearly to D.H. Lawrence's interpretation of Moby Dick and the atom bomb. The heart of the book lies in chapters such as the one deconstructing the Macaque monkey, a hierarchal species that mirrors both our own social Darwinism and our better heroic nature.