Throwim Way Leg (ePub)
Tree-Kangaroos, Possums, and Penis Gourds: On the Track of Unknown Mammals in Wildest New Guinea
(Sprache: Englisch)
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Produktdetails
Produktinformationen zu „Throwim Way Leg (ePub)“
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Tim Flannery
- 2018, 336 Seiten, Englisch
- Verlag: Grove Press
- ISBN-10: 0802191118
- ISBN-13: 9780802191113
- Erscheinungsdatum: 01.09.2018
Abhängig von Bildschirmgröße und eingestellter Schriftgröße kann die Seitenzahl auf Ihrem Lesegerät variieren.
eBook Informationen
- Dateiformat: ePub
- Größe: 10 MB
- Ohne Kopierschutz
Sprache:
Englisch
Pressezitat
“Readers of Throwim Way Leg, a gripping tale about the most remote areas of New Guinea, will be grateful they’re spared the discomforts and dangers the author describes in hair-raising detail. But they’ll be catapulted into exhilarating and adventures rarely chronicled in such vivid verbal pictures. . . . At the end of this wild adventurous literary ride, readers will feel blessed that a writer of such insight has recorded this remote environment of animal and human cultures on the verge of possible extinction.” —The Christian Science Monitor“[Throwim Way Leg] is an enthralling introduction to the mountain people of New Guinea—unimaginably remote, charming, cunning, cruel, subtle and appealing—and to their magnificent land. . . . [Flannery’s] evocations of the New Guinea landscape carry you away.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Throwim Way Leg tells the story, in a disarmingly wry and unpretentious way, of how Flannery made his great discoveries. . . . All of this makes for great reading—the thrill of the unknown, rare enough these days, combined with a scientist’s true passion for his work and for the creatures he studies.” —The Washington Post
“Whether literally going out on a limb to capture an ‘extinct’ bat, nearly getting killed when a hostile group identifies him as a member of the hated ‘wildlife’ clan, or solving the mystery of a tree-kangaroo with a white man’s face, Flannery combines diligent science, heart-pounding adventure, and a respect for ancient cultures to create a compelling tale.” —Sierra, The National Magazine of the Sierra Club
“Exciting, exotic book, one that introduces the reader to a world far more mysterious than we might have imagined.” —William R. Wineke, Wisconsin State Journal
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“Reads like a collection of adventure stories.” —Library Journal
“[An] energetic fusion of natural science and anthropology . . . The title comes from New Guinea Pidgin; referring to a first step, it means “to go on a journey.” Readers would do well to follow Flannery on this one.” —Publishers Weekly
“This book combines an irresistible author with an irresistible subject: Tim Flannery, a great zoologist and writer about science, relating his explorations of New Guinea, a vivid tropical universe. . . . The result is a dangerous book that you pick up at your peril, because it is so hard to put down.” —Jared M. Diamond, author of Guns, Germs, and Steel
“Australia has found its own Stephen Jay Gould.” —Matt Ridley, The Times Literary Supplement
“One of the world’s greatest zoologists . . . who’s probably discovered more new species than Darwin. He’s a remarkable man.” —Redmond O’Hanlon
“Tim Flannery is in the league of the all-time great explorers like Dr. David Livingstone.” —Sir David Attenborough
“What an extraordinary book this is. . . . Flannery provides a magical polychrome of [New Guinea]. You can hear the cataclysmic thunderstorms, smell the hunting dogs, taste the roast possum. No one else could have written this book. . . . The themes he elucidates are the largest themes available to any writer: life and death; religion and questions of belief; greed and the havoc that the pursuit of money can wreak; the politics of colonialism and oppression; the cultural specificity of morality. . . . Flannery is a fiercely intelligent and perceptive guide. He is also courageous. This is a journey through and beyond fear. . . . Flannery’s book is as fertile and fascinating as New Guinea itself. It deserves to be read widely and often.” —The Age (Melbourne)
“As vivid and compelling as being landed in a helicopter in a high valley among the mountains of Papua New Guinea and Irian Jaya, some of the wildest country left on earth.” —Geoffrey Dutton, The Bulletin
“[An] energetic fusion of natural science and anthropology . . . The title comes from New Guinea Pidgin; referring to a first step, it means “to go on a journey.” Readers would do well to follow Flannery on this one.” —Publishers Weekly
“This book combines an irresistible author with an irresistible subject: Tim Flannery, a great zoologist and writer about science, relating his explorations of New Guinea, a vivid tropical universe. . . . The result is a dangerous book that you pick up at your peril, because it is so hard to put down.” —Jared M. Diamond, author of Guns, Germs, and Steel
“Australia has found its own Stephen Jay Gould.” —Matt Ridley, The Times Literary Supplement
“One of the world’s greatest zoologists . . . who’s probably discovered more new species than Darwin. He’s a remarkable man.” —Redmond O’Hanlon
“Tim Flannery is in the league of the all-time great explorers like Dr. David Livingstone.” —Sir David Attenborough
“What an extraordinary book this is. . . . Flannery provides a magical polychrome of [New Guinea]. You can hear the cataclysmic thunderstorms, smell the hunting dogs, taste the roast possum. No one else could have written this book. . . . The themes he elucidates are the largest themes available to any writer: life and death; religion and questions of belief; greed and the havoc that the pursuit of money can wreak; the politics of colonialism and oppression; the cultural specificity of morality. . . . Flannery is a fiercely intelligent and perceptive guide. He is also courageous. This is a journey through and beyond fear. . . . Flannery’s book is as fertile and fascinating as New Guinea itself. It deserves to be read widely and often.” —The Age (Melbourne)
“As vivid and compelling as being landed in a helicopter in a high valley among the mountains of Papua New Guinea and Irian Jaya, some of the wildest country left on earth.” —Geoffrey Dutton, The Bulletin
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