Richard Coniff, a Guggenheim Fellow and winner of the National Magazine Award, writes for Smithsonian and National Geographic and is a frequent commentator on NPR's All Things Considered and a guest columnist for the New York Times. His books include The Natural History of the Rich, Swimming with Piranhas at Feeding Time, and The Species Seekers. He lives in Old Lyme, Connecticut.
"An anecdotal romp through the strange history of naturalism.
Absurd characters, exciting discoveries, and fierce rivalries
abound."
*Outside Magazine*
"An enduring story bursting at the seams with intriguing,
fantastical and disturbing anecdotes."
*New Scientist*
"[Conniff] chronicles two centuries of adventure, and at the same
time illustrates important developments in human thought."
*Christian Science Monitor*
"A swashbuckling romp…brilliantly evokes that just-before Darwin
era."
*BBC Focus*
"[This] history of the ‘great age of discovery’ is
spellbinding."
*Publishers Weekly*
"[Conniff’s] enthusiasm for his subject and admiration of these
explorers is infectious…an entertaining survey."
*Kirkus Reviews*
"Modern biology and medicine would not be what they are today if
not for the death-defying naturalists who set out to travel the
world and find new species. In The Species Seekers, Richard Conniff
creates a marvelous rogues’ gallery of these brave, sometimes
reckless heroes of taxonomy, full of surprising tales of gorillas,
platypuses, and disease-laden mosquitoes."
*Carl Zimmer, author of Parasite Rex*
"A marvelous tribute to the age of wonder."
*Bernd Heinrich, author of White Feathers and Racing the Clock*
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