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$10.99
61. Mountain Gorillas: Three Decades
$15.42
62. The Impenetrable Forest: My Gorilla
$45.00
63. The Education of Koko
 
64. The Story of Monkeys, Great Apes,
$114.54
65. Cenzoo: The Story of a Baby Gorilla
$53.61
66. Great Ape Language: Gorilla, Orangutan,
$48.63
67. Fictional Primates: Fictional
 
68. Behavioral observations of feral
69. Almost Us: Portraits of the Apes
70. Chimpanzee: Chimpanzee, Ape, Primate
71. A Brain for All Seasons: Human
 
$13.75
72. The Great Apes: Between Two Worlds

61. Mountain Gorillas: Three Decades of Research at Karisoke (Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology)
Paperback: 448 Pages (2005-09-15)
list price: US$80.00 -- used & new: US$10.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0521019869
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Over thirty years ago, Dian Fossey established the Karisoke Research Center in Rwanda to study the behavior and ecology of mountain gorillas.Some of the offspring of the gorillas first studied by Fossey are still being observed today and the long-term observations on known individuals, from birth to death, and data on social behavior within and among the groups have led to an understanding of many aspects of gorilla social structure. Written by scientists who have worked at Karisoke over the years, this book highlights and summarizes what we have learned about the behavior, ecology, and conservation of the genus Gorilla and two other recognized subspecies and provides some comparisons with other gorilla populations elsewhere in Africa. ... Read more


62. The Impenetrable Forest: My Gorilla Years in Uganda, Revised Edition
by Thor Hanson
Hardcover: 284 Pages (2008-06)
list price: US$24.95 -- used & new: US$15.42
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1933698195
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Finalist in the Next Generation Indie Book Awards.

Dr. Thor Hanson, scientist and writer, brought the nascent gorilla tourist program in Bwindi National Park, located within Africa's Impenetrable Forest, to life. With grace and good humor Hanson navigates the local customs, mores and bureaucracy governing everything from love to superstition to build infrastructure, hire and train staff, fend off millions of ants among many other creatures while studying and acclimating the mountain gorillas to humans in their midst. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (20)

3-0 out of 5 stars Don't read, GO!`
I bought this for my wife as we ventured to Uganda.We never read it because we went there and experienced it first hand.

5-0 out of 5 stars BUY THIS BOOK!
SCIENTIFIC BOOKS THAT capture our imagination are rarer than an Arizona jack-a-lope. Thor Hanson's The Impenetrable Forest will appeal to anyone interested in travel and endangered species. Hanson chronicles his Peace Corps Volunteer experience in Uganda, helping to establish foreign tourism to a very new wildlife reserve. He joined the project only two years after the inception of Bwindi Impenetrable National Park and during a crucial time: mountain gorillas native to this area and the neighboring Rwanda were being slaughtered
Like Peter Matthiessen (African Silences), Hanson records wonderful details about Ugandan life. Unlike Matthiessen the cool, distant observer, Hanson joins the celebration of life. He recounts attending a cultural event where "people gaped and laughed, or rushed forward to shake our hands . . . `What is your clan?'" they asked and once he answered with names given to him by his African host, locals cackled. He describes empazi (African ants) who overran his home one evening, covering walls, floors, ceiling, and even his bed as he slept. Madly pulling off biting ants, dressed only in boxers, and carrying a lantern, he retreated to the outhouse, the only ant-free place on the property.
Written in classic travel memoir style, the book includes healthy portions of humor, empathy and is liberally spiced with history, geography, and local flavor. Like a warm cup of sweet Mexican atole on a cold morning, the book fills your belly and makes you smile. Since a portion of the purchase price is donated to conservation efforts, readers help protect the few remaining giant primates.
Originally published in 2001, this is a second edition that includes new material, updates, and an epilogue about the author's return pilgrimage made in 2006, eleven years after leaving. This is a success story for the number of mountain gorillas increased between 13 and 21 percent over that period while the human population increased 60 percent.
Some Volunteers' memoirs are filled with regret and tinged with shame, like a bloody, bare-backed minor priest flogging himself for not being worthy. This book, though serious, is told by a man who believes that life is one man getting hugged for sneaking a kiss and another getting slapped.

5-0 out of 5 stars The best Peace Corps experience ever!
This is an amazing book about an amazing part of the world. I took this book with me when I visited Bwindi Impenetrable Forest a few weeks ago. While seeing the gorillas myself was wonderful, Thor Hanson's account in The Impenetrable Forest: My Gorilla Years in Uganda, Revised Edition really added depth to my visit. In the book, Hanson recounts his years as a Peace Corps volunteer helping to establish ecotourism in Bwindi (the same ecotourism I ultimately benefitted from). His book weaves observations of the gorillas with amusing anecdotes of the Uganda people, whom he describes as being amongst the kindest in the world (an observation with which I agree).

Hanson really breathes life into the gorillas, describing the personalities of the individual families. One episode in particular really stuck out. Gorillas often mock charge humans. Once, when Hanson was observing a family, two aggressive males charged him and his group. However, another gorilla stood in between the aggressors and the humans, as if protecting them. This heartwarming episode suggests some gorillas have empathy for humans. Through Hanson's book, hopefully more of us will have empathy for them.

Hanson also provides an excellent overview of life in Peace Corps. While he admits his Peace Corps experience may have been more exciting (most volunteers end up teaching English), he shows the struggles some volunteers face immersing themselves into an entirely new culture. I was particularly struck by how volunteers sometimes felt they were never fully accepted into the community - that they often remained the "white curiousity". On that note, this book should be assigned reading for new Peace Corps volunteers.

The Impenetrable Forest: My Gorilla Years in Uganda, Revised Edition is not just about gorillas, not just about Uganda, not just about Peace Corps - it's the combination that makes reading it such a joy. I wholeheartedly recommend it if you ever get to visit the gorillas and people in Bwindi - or if you are just looking for a good book.

5-0 out of 5 stars First rate introduction to Ugandan culture and Mountain Gorillas
I bought this book with the expectation that I would learn lots of facts about mountain gorillas before heading out to Bwindi to see them in the flesh. But now, having just finished the book, I can't honestly say that I learned much about gorilla behavior. Hanson devotes maybe a third of the book to discussing gorillas, and even then, the emphasis is on the habituation process which he was involved in as part of his Peace Corps mission, not on gorilla ecology. The rest of the book covers Ugandan history, culture, the impact of the Rwandan genocide, and the struggle to convince the local people to see the parks as sources of sustainable income, rather than hunting and poaching grounds. But the bulk of the story deals with Hanson's experiences and relationships with the Ugandan people - the friendships he formed, and the losses he suffered (mainly through the ravages of AIDS).
Even though I learned little new about gorillas, I still recommend this informative and poignant book to anybody wanting to learn more about East Africa.

5-0 out of 5 stars Fantastic Read
This is one of those books that once I started reading, I could not stop. It really was that interesting! It's a mix of gorilla life, human life and the author's exploits in Uganda. The author did a great job of blending all of this together in a book that can make you sad in one paragraph, laugh in another, and amaze you in yet another paragraph. ... Read more


63. The Education of Koko
by Francine Patterson
Hardcover: 224 Pages (1981-09)
list price: US$15.95 -- used & new: US$45.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0030461014
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (3)

5-0 out of 5 stars ONE OF THE MOST FAMOUS "APE LANGUAGE" EXPERIMENTS
Dr. Francine "Penny" Patterson (b. 1947) is an American researcher who taught a modified form of American Sign Language to a gorilla named Koko. Patterson and co-author Eugene Linden (author of Apes, Men, and Language (Pelican) and Silent Partners: The Legacy of the Ape Language Experiments) state in the Preface to this 1981 book, "Koko is a ten-year-old, female lowland gorilla. She is the first of her species to have acquired a human language. This is the story of Project Koko, the longest ongoing study of the language abilities of an ape yet undertaken. The project was initiated by Dr. Francis Patterson in 1972 and is still continuing today.... As this book will be dealing primarily with Dr. Patterson's research and the events that have marked Project Koko, the authors have decided to use her voice to present the details of her work."

She notes, "I had the advantage of surveying the trial-and-error approach to teaching language used in previous experiments with chimps. These experiments also produced a great fund of information against which I might judge Koko's performance---if, in fact, she learned language at all. In 1972, when I began Project Koko, there were a great number of scientists who disputed that the chimps' achievements had any linguistic significance. Project Koko began during turbulent times in the behavioral sciences, and it was only because of previous pioneering work with chimps that I had any chance of being taken seriously. My cause was not helped by the fact that the subject of my experiment was not a chimp, but a gorilla."

She argues that "Because we consider the chimp to be our closest relative, we have tended to accept its intellectual superiority over the gorilla without too much scrutiny. And since chimps are the easiest of the three great apes to test for intelligence, the claim tends to become a self-fulfilling prophecy."She later notes, "Koko's responses were correct about 58 percent of the time when addressed exclusively in sign or voice, and 64 percent of the time when simultaneous communication was used. This suggests that Koko understands English at least as well as she understands sign language."

She observes concerning two famous chimp ASL experiments, "I cannot help but note that Terrace returned Nim to his owner in Oklahoma after four years, and that Premack's experiment with Sarah ended after a few years. Moreover, in none of these cases did the experimenter allow himself to develop a true, close rapport with his chimp ... it is hard not to wonder whether different conclusions about ape language abilities reached by these scientists ultimately trace back to those different relationships between experiments and subjects and to the persistence that has marked the efforts of those of us who have established close rapport with our subjects. If this is the case, I am reaffirmed in my belief that one cannot really understand the mental workings of other animals or bring them to the limits of their abilities unless one first has true rapport with them. Even the critics admit this possibility."

5-0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Well written, informative and in many places humorous, this book never becomes too dull so that it bores the reader nor does it become a fluff piece. I would strongly recommend this to anyone interested in psychology, ASL, evolutionary psychology or great apes. It's a great find!

5-0 out of 5 stars An awesome book for Animal Lovers!
If you're an animal lover you will adore this book. I am going to be a zoology major... hopefully primatology and adored this book. Dr. Patterson does a great job describing the ways Koko, a lowland gorilla, learns to adapt to speak American Sign Language. Can you imagine speaking to a sweet gorilla?
I loved this book and recommend it to anyone! Also there are some really cute, detailed pictures.(...) ... Read more


64. The Story of Monkeys, Great Apes, and Small Apes
by Dorothy Edwards Shuttlesworth
 Library Binding: Pages (1972-06)
list price: US$6.68
Isbn: 038504724X
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65. Cenzoo: The Story of a Baby Gorilla
by Joe Verrengia
Paperback: 81 Pages (1997-09)
list price: US$16.95 -- used & new: US$114.54
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1570981280
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Product Description
Fully illustrated with 90 color photos, this is an engrossing true story that combines Cenzoo's tale with information about African lowland gorillas. Readers accompany Cenzoo on his plane ride to Denver, as he is reunited with his mother, explores his new home, and settles into a routine of learning, climbing, nesting, and play. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars A must-have for gorilla lovers
This is a must have book for anyone who loves gorillas. It chronicles the heartwarming story of a baby gorilla & his family as they travel to their new home showing how they adapt to their new environment.The bookstarts off with the tale of Cenzoo, the baby gorilla, who was abandoned& near dead. It details his and his families (him & mother, anotherfemale, & a silverback male) airplane adventure to their new home in aDenver zoo. The story continues to follow the lives of the gorilla familyas they acclimate to their new home. There are many observations about howa gorilla's behavior differs in captivity versus in the wild. I really likehow each gorilla's personality traits were described. I truly felt as if Igot to know each of the gorillas. Lots of time is also given the plight ofthe vanishing gorillas & what is being done to help.

5-0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Absorbing, thought-provoking, informative, well-written!Wish it was longer -- with more details about the author's experience with the gorillas in Rwanda and well as more pictures of the Primate Panorama and Cenzoo's daily activities.I've put a visit to the zoo on my travel list. ... Read more


66. Great Ape Language: Gorilla, Orangutan, Sign Language, Lexigram, Yerkish, Primatology, Language, Animal Cognition, Animal Language, Animal Communication, ... Communication, Primate Cognition
Paperback: 104 Pages (2009-12-10)
list price: US$57.00 -- used & new: US$53.61
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 6130251270
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Product Description
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Research into non-human great ape language has involved teaching bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans to communicate with human beings and with each other using sign language, physical tokens, and lexigrams; see Yerkish. Primatologists argue that the primates' use of these tools indicates their ability to use "language", although this is not consistent with some definitions of that term. ... Read more


67. Fictional Primates: Fictional Apes, Fictional Monkeys, Ishmael, Donkey Kong, King Kong, Optimus Primal, Oozaru, Sun Wukong, Gorilla Grodd
Paperback: 418 Pages (2010-09-15)
list price: US$48.63 -- used & new: US$48.63
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1157831087
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Product Description
Chapters: Fictional Apes, Fictional Monkeys, Ishmael, Donkey Kong, King Kong, Optimus Primal, Oozaru, Sun Wukong, Gorilla Grodd, Marsupilami, Giganta, Bulk and Skull, List of Fictional Apes, Ultra-Humanite, the Magilla Gorilla Show, Captain Simian ... Read more


68. Behavioral observations of feral gorillas: A bibliography
by Jean Balch Williams
 Unknown Binding: 17 Pages (1985)

Asin: B0006F3V6E
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69. Almost Us: Portraits of the Apes (William H. Calvin)
by William H. Calvin
Kindle Edition: Pages (2010-08-29)
list price: US$4.99
Asin: B0041D88HE
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Apes look and act far more like humans than other animals. Apes are super apes, just as apes are super monkeys. Portraits of the apes provide some glimpses into our closest cousins.


EXCERPTS: Chimps are tool users in the wild but many practices are seen only in a few places, suggesting that they are passed on by observation and learning. I’ll scatter some tool examples among the pictures and also include examples of communication. In general, the items are only seen in the orangutans and the “three chimpanzees” (chimp, bonobo, and us), not in other wild apes (gorilla, gibbon, siamang):

Chimps can hammer open tough nuts, seeking out flat stones to use as an anvil.Some will even stabilize the anvil by wedging another stone underneath.

Chimps can mop up insects using a leaf and then eat the insects.

A chimp will even make a thin stick into a tool by stripping off leaves and protrusions, then punching through the ground into an underground termite nest, and eating the defending termites that cling to the stick when it is withdrawn.

Chimpanzee Politics: subordinate males will form coalitions to control the power of a dominant chimp.

NOT SEEN: A chimp coalition playing against another coalition, as in the ad hoc teams of humans for various games.Only chimps and humans exhibit both the cooperative hunting of game and the gang warfare that often kills a lone neighbor. In both, the males act as a bonded “band of brothers.”

Some chimps will use a stick to comb tangles out of their hair.

The royal wrist: adult apes may extend the back of their hand to be kissed by an infant, which reassures it.

When fruit is out of reach, some wild chimps (and orangutans) will use a long stick to hook and pull down a branch.


The often-deprecated nonreproductive sexual behaviors occasionally seen in chimpanzees, gorillas, and humans are seen in almost every bonobo.

A bonobo may play a version of blindman’s buff, holding a hand over his eyes or draping a blanket over his head – and then show off how well he can balance on a rope or bounce off the walls without looking where he is going.


An orangutan will use a stick to scratch its back.

Orangutans can grab a sleeping slow loris and kill it with a bite to the head.

NOT SEEN: group hunting.

To get across a wide gap, a female orangutan bit through a thick vine and then used it to swing across, Tarzan style.

In zoo settings, orangutans are much faster to learn tool use than chimpanzees and are also more creative.

NOT SEEN: Orangutan Politics for establishing alliances that prevent a big male from dominating.

Sharing food with friends, and not just family, has not been seen in wild gorillas.

No “Gorilla Politics”:Males do not form coalitions to limit the power of the dominant silverback male.

... Read more


70. Chimpanzee: Chimpanzee, Ape, Primate cognition, Nim Chimpsky, Tool use by animals, Great ape language, Laughter in animals, List of fictional apes, Gorillas ... Great ape personhood, Bonobo, Silvery Gibbon
Paperback: 24 Pages (2009-05-25)
list price: US$54.00
Isbn: 6130011482
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Chimpanzee. Ape, Primate cognition, Nim Chimpsky,Tool useby animals, Great ape language, Laughter in animals,List offictional apes, Gorillas in comics, Chimpanzee genomeproject, Great ape personhood, Bonobo, Silvery Gibbon,Kloss's Gibbon, Western Hoolock Gibbon, SouthernWhite-cheeked Gibbon, Bornean Orangutan, SumatranOrangutan,Western Gorilla. ... Read more


71. A Brain for All Seasons: Human Evolution and Abrupt Climate Change (William H. Calvin)
by William H. Calvin
Kindle Edition: Pages (2010-09-01)
list price: US$4.99
Asin: B0042ANY52
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Apes look and act far more like humans than other animals. Apes are super apes, just as apes are super monkeys. Portraits of the apes provide some glimpses into our closest cousins. [Shows in full color on Kindle apps for color screens.]

EXCERPT:
"It reminds me of what my colleague Gordon Orians said about views that make people feel good. As a behavioral ecologist, he speaks figuratively of the Ghost of Dangers Past (we dream of spiders and snakes, not current dangers such as cars and handguns). He says our human aesthetic sensibilities are similarly influenced by the Ghost of Habitats Past. Habitat selection by an animal is influenced by where it grew up, by where it sees others of its own species, and – especially when those criteria aren’t working very well – by some innate knowledge of what the species’ former habitats looked like…. A high-ranked vista for humans generally includes some water (stream, pond, seashore). A forest view isn’t as good as one with some scattered trees (not too tall, either; trees that spread out in horizontal layers like acacias get higher viewer ratings). A few large animals in the distance (but not too close for comfort) is an attractive option. And, for best effect, the scene should be viewed from a slight elevation, preferably framed in a way that suggests viewing from some shelter.
In short, I would conclude, it’s the view from a tree nest in our ancestral savanna home. Such gut feelings tell us something about our ancestors – indeed about what they liked to put in their guts. Such innate likings would have guided individuals in selecting a habitat suited to the better ways of making a living for their species, back then – telling them when to settle down, when to move on to “a better view.”
Oriental landscape architecture adheres to this savanna-tree-house formula, what with that little shelter on the artificial hill from which to survey the ponds and scattered trees. It’s species specific to us humans – a chimp or bonobo would have a different esthetic, likely featuring more of an inside-the-forest view of fruit trees. They might find our open spaces threatening.
I’ll be in the Rift Valley soon, so let me save tree-house esthetics until then. Maybe this belongs on the hominid bootstrap list, if we can ever figure out chimp esthetics as a basis for comparison." ... Read more

Customer Reviews (11)

1-0 out of 5 stars Liberal trash
I've been reading "Understanding Human History" by Michael Hart which is in the same genre, when my daughter gave me "A Brain For All Seasons" to check out. William Calvin's book is sloppy, repetitive, heavily biased and patronizing. For example, when discussing the r-K continuum among human groups he talks down to us stupid people (anybody who would read this and think it was good must fit into this category) by explaining that a genetically controlled trait might be a "package deal" like getting leather seats and power windows together in a car. Look clown, you don't have to talk down to your audience unless you are writing your book for a bunch or morons (he was).
In another case he says that IQ does not have anything to do with intelligence (predicts whether you'll succeed in college, life, etc though!) and brain size differ between Asians and Blacks by more than 2 percent, and that wouldn't make much difference. Huh? 1370 (average Asian brain size) - 1270 cc (average black brain size)/1270 equals 7.9% on my calculator. Obviously he isn't the genius he thinks he is.
In another passage he says the Chinese failed to continue their seafaring expeditions (and go on to "discover" Europe) due to politics. This is true. He then goes on to put it into context, "you would have to imagine an ultraconservative takeover of the US that, for some reason, frowned on both airplanes and computers". Really? In the 1970's the "Progressives" told us we had to stop going to the Moon, put off going to Mars and stop launching money into space to spend it on the people on the earth. Seems like Mr. Calvin has it backwards. Besides, no one could call the Chinese conservative, they ALWAYS vote Democrat in the US. It's probably their progressive dictatorial proclivities that brought those westbound ships home, not the profit seeking conservative traits that the Europeans had when they sought gold and spice, tea and slaves when they conquered the entire world.
From there he goes on to tell us that hot means cold, warming means cooling, big brains helped evolution but didn't help Europeans and Chinese invent more stuff than Africans. What a clown.
People interested in science and real evolution cause and effect would be better off with Understanding Human History by Michael Hart. This guy is just a mouthpiece for bad math, bad science, and more government control of our economy.

3-0 out of 5 stars A Brain for All Seasons: Human Evolution and Abrupt Climate Change
The book is in fact a collected of notes and thoughts about various aspects of human evolution and its "actors". It is written rather to give some ideas for individual thinking than a comprehensive study of the subject introduced by the title. Unfortunately the book contains some mistakes (e.g. Homo sp. in Europe is not older than 1.0 Ma and absolutely not 1.7 Ma as stated on the page 39).
Nevertheless it could make a good reading for students and non-specialists interested in the subject. Remember, do not read this book without any additional source reading.

2-0 out of 5 stars disjointed? Hard for me to get through
I purchased this book on a friend's recommendation as an accessible, easy-to-read book (we both really enjoyed "Guns Germs and Steel"). However, I had a hard time following this author in his discussions as he travels. I wasn't sure of the point he was trying to make in the chapters. I applaud the author for attempting to describe his theory at a laymen's level, but I'm not sure he was successful.

4-0 out of 5 stars A Fascinating Account of How Abrupt Climate Changes might Have Affected Human Evolution
Human evolution is one of the great detective stories of the twenty-first century. How did this species, Homo sapien sapiens, come to be? Our written record provides some details for only about the last 10,000 years, but what about the millions of years on Earth beforehand? Charles Darwin's rock-solid theory of natural selection, while attacked from the political and religious right as unable to explain the "miracle" of life in the universe without reference to God's creation, remains at the center of all explanations that take a scientific perspective on the subject. William H. Calvin, on the faculty at the University of Washington's School of Medicine, offers in "A Brain for All Seasons" a modification of Darwin's theory that is both illuminating and reasoned. He argues that while Darwin thought in terms of eons of time and slow progression across thousands of generations, some evolutionary processes might be more immediate and striking.

Specifically, Calvin asserts that the capacity and complexity of the human brain grew significantly in response to cataclysm on the Earth. Cycles of radical and abrupt climate change, warm-and-wet versus cold-and-dry, help to explain the current state of human evolution. Ancient humans were driven to adapt within a few generations to abrupt climate change, a set of cycles between ice ages and warm seasons, forcing biological as well as other changes on those who survived (and probably few did). These "whiplash" climate shifts, as Calvin calls them, meant that those most adaptable survived and others did not. One major aspect of adaptability is brain power and reasoning. While not exclusive to Calvin, other scientists have made this case effectively, "A Brain for All Seasons" offers a reasoned, accessible explanation of how humanity came to be as it is today. It also offers a cautionary note about the potential for future abrupt climate change and what it might portend for the future of humanity. Wars over land and resources appear almost a certainty, he contends. Widespread starvation and death will also result. And again, those with the most adaptability will survive.

William Calvin's analysis is erudite and thought-provoking. It is also highly entertaining. Written as a travelogue that stretches across the globe, especially Africa and the Arctic, "A Brain for All Seasons" serves as an entrée for a lay audience into the world of paleobiology. Calvin does a good job of speaking to that broad audience, but as is the case with most books that seek to communicate scientific knowledge to non-scientists this one sometimes oversimplifies and overstates the evidence. It should be read, as should all books, with a critical mind, something that I'm sure William Calvin would appreciate. Taken altogether, however, it is a useful starting point in understanding how humans evolved from the distant past.

5-0 out of 5 stars Challenging but well worth reading
This is not an easy book to read. Calvin aims high, setting out to present a coherent new model of how repeated, abrupt climate changes may have driven the evolution of the human brain. Since science has only known about Earth's history of climatic instability for a few years and many details remain to be filled in, Calvin has taken on a major challenge. As if that were not enough, in the second half of _A Brain for All Seasons_, he presents the latest ideas about the mechanisms that may have shifted the global climate from extreme to extreme in the past and may do so in the future, and presents an insightful analysis of the risks involved in our present denial-driven do-nothing approach toward climate change.

Unfortunately, a lot of the book reads as though Calvin were thinking out loud. He tends to follow his chain of thought wherever it leads at the time, which I found quite frustrating early on. However, he eventually weaves together the many strands he's mulling over, often in an original and thought-provoking way.

If you come away from the book with a clear understanding of his two main ideas, (1) that repeating cycles of large, abrupt climate shifts have taken place over the course of human evolution and provide a convincing ratcheting mechanism for increased brain size and complexity, and (2) that we urgently need to move past the now headshakingly stupid debate about whether or not human-induced climate change is real to a pragmatic analysis of the risks looming ahead and our options for dealing with them, it's well worth a bit of frustration at his style. In the end, I found the book more than worth the effort.

Robert Adler
Author of _Science Firsts: From the Creation of Science to the Science of Creation_, (John Wiley& Sons, 2002)
... Read more


72. The Great Apes: Between Two Worlds
by Michael Nichols
 Hardcover: 200 Pages (1993-05)
list price: US$35.00 -- used & new: US$13.75
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0870449478
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Including contributions by Jane Goodall, Dr. George B. Schaller, and Mary Smith, the compelling story of gorillas, chimpanzees, orangutans, and bonobos--the newest "great ape"--is presented alongside award-winning photographs by "Nick" Nichols in a brand-new National Geographic Society release. ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars A place of both light and darkness
This book of infinite character and magnificent amaizements is a one in a life-time. It is a passionate book keeping your immense interest and curiosity from the first to the last page. It describes the life of theApes in their wonderful habitat as well as their surroundings with theconstant threat from humans. With beautifully well done pictures, this bookjourneys you to a different world. ... Read more


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