Reviews

The Book of Barely Imagined Beings: A 21st Century Bestiary by Caspar Henderson

heatherp23's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

2.0

bluestarfish's review against another edition

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4.0

From axolotl to zebra fish this modern day bestiary uses the unusual and lesser known beasts of our world as a springboard for all sorts of musings and diversions about the state of our world and the wonder and joy of it too. This of course can barely scratch the surface of the weirdness in the world but it was a very enjoyable read and it provided a lot of good leads to go off and find pictures/videos/more information about later on too.

readsewpole's review

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2.0

I wanted to love this book, I really did. I powered through it for hours as it drifted around on tangents- interesting tangents, but tangents. Every time I picked it back up I had no idea what I was reading about for a few pages. I found myself looking up things a lot, because I wanted to know what something the author described looked like. It was just tedious, and I wanted to learn about the animals, I enjoyed going into the evolutionary history, but the author really used each animal as a starting point to a lot of information not about that animal. I would have preferred more focused chapters, or else a broader book about evolution that used these animals to illustrate. But instead it wasn’t either, and I don’t recall a lot about what I read.

thetashc's review against another edition

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3.0

An A-to-Z of some of Earth’s strangest and most interesting creatures.

I only just gave this one three stars and that was because of the animals. Unfortunately, this is not just about animals but is also some wanky philosophical musing into Earth’s history, human history and our future. Way too academic and was a struggle for me to get through.

wiktoriakostka's review against another edition

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funny informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

4.0

pino_sabatelli's review against another edition

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3.0

Ispirato da "Il libro degli esseri immaginari" di Borges, Henderson prova a creare un bestiario per il nuovo millennio, parlandoci di ventisette animali reali ma "assai più bizzarri di quelli immaginari": "a malapena immaginabili", appunto.
Nell'introduzione l'Autore dichiara di voler esplorare attraverso "accostamenti improvvisi" cosa ci lega a quegli animali, utilizzando gli strumenti della biologia evolutiva e riflettendo sul le conseguenze del comportamento umano sul loro habitat e sul pianeta tutto.
Henderson per primo riconosce che alcune "analogie e digressioni hanno poco a che fare con gli animali in sé" e che gli esiti di quegli accostamenti sono talvolta "un po' forzati". Il problema vero, però, è che quelle "analogie e digressioni" sono anche tantissime e, spesso, interminabili...
Il risultato finale è una lettura davvero faticosa, peraltro corredata da un apparato iconografico del tutto insufficiente. Un difetto non da poco visto il costo del libro.

joseph_nevnev's review

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informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

5.0

scifipunk's review

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challenging informative inspiring slow-paced

5.0

principite's review

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I was really enjoying the book but the author did a really horrible unecessary suicide joke and it just made me put the book down. 

chaffinch_22's review

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challenging informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

4.25