A remarkably efficient, balanced short novel and a favorite I go back to again and again. The structural conceit is deceptively radical, consisting of brief, tightly focused chapters each corresponding to a specific collection note from an insect in the narrator's apparently vast collection. So as readers we're given those isolated moment with which to understand the four decade span of the story, but somehow it's plenty - Elwyn Farmer is so vivid and realized as a character that we come to know him well, and to see him on his own, with his family, and with his business associates and superiors, and all of those relationships reveal a different side of his character in brief, perfect moments pinned down like Elwyn's insects.