Reviews tagging 'Animal death'

Cannibalism by Bill Schutt

4 reviews

serenityfound's review against another edition

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dark funny informative slow-paced

3.0

It feels like the author is trying to be Mary Roach - with attempts at humor and such - but just does not succeed at it. There are also a number of curious references to "political correctness" that I can't determine the point (or POV) of. I do applaud him for staying largely away from criminal/MI-driven cannibalism in the 20th & 21st centuries out of respect for victim families, though.

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talonsontypewriters's review against another edition

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informative medium-paced
Starts strong, and has some interesting content, but it starts to fall apart when Schutt delves more into the history of cannibalism among human populations, with the light tone feeling more and more forced and the concluding scope even wider and more disorganized than the setup justifies. (If you have to cite Freud to lead into your final thesis, it probably needs some reworking.) In general, I found myself irritated by the author's attitude more than once, and as a biology student I found the popular science angle more to the book's detriment than anything -- though some lack of depth is probably just due to the author balking for fear of playing into sensationalism, the fact that even very simple concepts in biology must be explained for laypeople is likely a factor as well.

I was also unimpressed that Gajdusek's work with kuru is repeatedly referenced, but that he was a convicted child molester -- who sexually abused boys he adopted from the very region he studied, at that -- is never even touched upon, while several much lesser scandals among other cited researchers are at least noted in passing. Given the meandering path from relevance the last few chapters seem to take (and the respect Schutt tends to extend to the victims of both colonization and cannibalistic murderers), surely so much as a footnote might have been warranted.

Ultimately overall fairly disappointing, with poor organization, weak writing, and tentative conviction dulling what could have been a truly fascinating read, though I did like the earlier chapters on cannibalism in other animals and the discussion of the questionable accuracy of historic claims of cannibalistic practices around the world. I'm refraining from giving a star rating (at least for now) for that reason, but I'd say it probably sits somewhere between 2-3.

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davidbythebay's review

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challenging funny informative lighthearted medium-paced

4.0

This was a great look at what is a stomach churning subject. And I have to say, I'm taking the author at his word with some of what he says - ie, the truth about praying mantis mating or the taste of placenta - but I certainly learned a lot in an enjoyable and comprehensible book. I never groaned picking it up, though I did put it down a few times mid paragraph because of the subject matter. Truly a fun book on cannibalism. I listened to the audiobook while making chili. That was an interesting family dinner. I assure you, though, I didn't take any tips or recipes from this book. It was just an enjoyable read about cannibalism in the natural world, whether that be animals or humans. 

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lilbury's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark informative fast-paced

5.0

I enjoyed this book significantly more than I expected to. The audiobook version had a very enjoyable narrator. It was super informative and engaging, and went in directions that were unexpected. I appreciated that this book focused on the evolutionary and biological aspects of cannibalism throughout the animal and human world. It wrapped up in a very relevant way too. You will learn a ton from this book. 

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