Darwin's Most Wonderful Plants: A Tour of His Botanical Legacy

Author:   Ken Thompson
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226675671


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   07 October 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Darwin's Most Wonderful Plants: A Tour of His Botanical Legacy


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Full Product Details

Author:   Ken Thompson
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Dimensions:   Width: 13.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 20.10cm
Weight:   0.363kg
ISBN:  

9780226675671


ISBN 10:   022667567
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   07 October 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

This is a fascinating insight into the scientist's sheer delight in observing the minutiae of living organisms. Intuitive he may have been, but it was the painstaking hours spent on detailed observation that put him in a position to generate his larger ideas. --Gardens Illustrated In this quietly riveting study, plant biologist Ken Thompson reveals Charles Darwin as a botanical revolutionary. --Nature


A survey of the botanical experimenting and theorizing that occupied Darwin's golden years. This little volume proceeds from Virginia creepers to sundews to orchids to pansies, all as gently as a Sunday garden tour, but with expert evolutionary commentary, and it is garnished by Thompson with some odd facts about plant evolution that Darwin might have considered but didn't. It's a glimpse of Darwin the country squire, Darwin the horticulturalist, an old man pottering in what Thompson calls 'the cabbage patch'--or think of Don Corleone amid the tomatoes. -- New York Review of Books In this quietly riveting study, plant biologist Ken Thompson reveals Charles Darwin as a botanical revolutionary. -- Nature This is a fascinating insight into the scientist's sheer delight in observing the minutiae of living organisms. Intuitive he may have been, but it was the painstaking hours spent on detailed observation that put him in a position to generate his larger ideas. -- Gardens Illustrated In Darwin's Most Wonderful Plants: A Tour of His Botanical Legacy, an engaging, readable volume, Ken Thompson aims to resuscitate Charles Darwin's reputation as a botanist by guiding readers on a 'tour' through all of Darwin's books about plants. -- Victorian Studies In that respect, this volume would be wonderful enough if it was simply an insightful romp through Darwin's botanical experimentising, but what makes it most wonderful is the way Thompson goes beyond Darwin, providing insights from modern research on Darwin's plants (and showing where mysteries remain), as well as recounting fascinating examples of species and phenomena that Darwin never knew, some discovered only recently, but that surely would have delighted the naturalist. -- The Quarterly Review of Biology Darwin's Most Wonderful Plants is a thoroughly enjoyable book, copiously illustrated. It is accessible to the interested, lay person but has enough detail for the serious researcher. --Charles H. Miksicek Economic Botany When Charles Darwin boarded the HMS Beagle at the age of twenty-three, he thought of himself as a geologist, but when he settled down to domestic life back in rural England, plants began to fascinate him. For Darwin, plants provided the near-at-hand evidence of evolution, and he wrote six books about them. Thompson revisits Darwin's botany, showing us how insightful he was, where (rarely) he was wrong and the marvelous discoveries that have been made since, like a plant with roots that trap small organisms, fern spores that walk, and trees that lean towards the equator. Darwin himself would have loved this book. --Jonathan Silvertown, author of Dinner with Darwin: Food, Drink, and Evolution


In this quietly riveting study, plant biologist Ken Thompson reveals Charles Darwin as a botanical revolutionary. --Nature This is a fascinating insight into the scientist's sheer delight in observing the minutiae of living organisms. Intuitive he may have been, but it was the painstaking hours spent on detailed observation that put him in a position to generate his larger ideas. --Gardens Illustrated


Author Information

Ken Thompson is an independent senior research fellow in the Department of Animal and Plant Sciences at the University of Sheffield and former director of the Buxton Climate Change Impacts Laboratory. His recent books include Do We Need Pandas? The Uncomfortable Truth about Biodiversity; Where Do Camels Belong? The Story and Science of Invasive Species; and The Sceptical Gardener: The Thinking Person's Guide to Good Gardening.

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