This is at least two books in one, although it isn’t presented as such, split almost exactly down the middle. Despite the subtitle “The New Science of Dinosaurs” and the summary on the back cover promising “controversial new theories”, some 236 pages are actually taken up in a historical overview of paleontology; nothing approaching new gets a look-in until at least the halfway point.
Short version: Being only an interested bystander, as it were, and not a paleontologist or any sort of expert, I do not especially support or deny the central theories put forward by Ford in this book. I do however take issue with Ford’s frequent false humility, arrogance, and hypocrisy, which is what brings the rating down in my opinion. It is readable, certainly, and definitely accessible to the non-expert, but put forward in such an antagonistic way that I wonder if the aim was less to illuminate the actual theories and more to stir up as much controversy as he could manage for no other reason than because he quite enjoys the conflict.
Long version:
Part 1:
This part would probably be around 3 stars by itself, maybe a little more. It consists of an interesting and relatively comprehensive history of paleontology and fossil collecting. In it, Ford gives an overall description of how ideas about extinction, evolution, and dinosaurs specifically have changed over time, going back several thousand years and getting progressively more detailed when we enter the more familiar periods of fossil discovery and study in the 19th and 20th centuries. He provides mini biographies for many of the paleontologists and fossil collectors described, although he seems to show a recurring bias against anyone with official, or at least relevant, academic qualifications. He is clearly quite taken with the idea of rebellious, genius non-specialists. Just as clearly, he is extremely disparaging towards Charles Darwin for no particular reason I can identify. While this section certainly has its intriguing points, I am not sure of its relevance to the (apparent) subject of the book as a whole.
Part 2:
In this section, Ford finally presents the theories and arguments that the book is purportedly about, namely that dinosaurs all evolved and lived as primarily aquatic creatures. As I said, I am not a paleontologist (although to be fair neither is the author) and the purpose of this review is not to support or deny Ford’s claims, but I do take some issues with the way it is presented and I do have a few questions.
Firstly, a large part of this section can be summed up as Ford having an idea in a museum once and then becoming increasingly irate when professional paleontologists argue against his claims. Some of his suggestions are certainly interesting, but he presents them in such a sweeping and somewhat arrogant way that it is difficult to see past. He often refers to the idea of dinosaurs living on land as “terrestrial tyranny” (once as “territorial tyranny”, although I am assuming this is an error), and is quite insistent on the idea of some sort of global conspiracy to suppress any suggestions to the contrary.
Every piece of evidence presented against Ford produces the same treatment: outright dismissal, often without any particularly detailed argument about why. Many dinosaurs were extremely large; therefore, Ford suggests they would have been unable to survive on land and must have lived in the water. Ford does not respond to the established proposals for how they might, in fact, have coped on land except to say that any such assertion is clearly wrong and he is clearly right. I would have been really interested in even a single chapter where Ford lays out what the arguments for a terrestrial lifestyle are, and then dismantled them as he saw fit. Instead, he mostly ignores them. For example; there is a single line mentioning skeletal pneumaticity, quite near the end of the book. I got excited when I saw that – finally, a widespread feature of the giant dinosaurs – beyond the simple fact of their size – that we might get some detail on! An argument that has been used to support the terrestrial idea of dinosaurs, which we might get a well-constructed argument against! Nope. Ford briefly asserts that this would have aided buoyancy, then moves on. I would have liked more detail here, particularly regarding Ford’s interpretation of why skeletal pneumaticity in extant animals is more commonly seen in birds, and is not as far as I know particularly widespread in aquatic animals, including the crocodiles who have a lifestyle the most similar to what Ford is proposing for the dinosaurs.
A summary of other issues and queries:
• Ford mentions a passing reference to Galileo from an early interviewer a lot considering he professes profound embarrassment about it on more than one occasion.
• On that note, Ford repeats himself regularly. After proudly talking about satirizing long-winded scientific communication. In a book which is 464 pages long, not including notes and index, half of which is not even about the subject matter at hand.
• At one point Ford talks about writing a (different) book which “made the word 'expert' into a target for suspicion”. This does not seem to me to be something to boast about.
• A lot of the second half of the book seems to be reprints of previously published magazine and blog articles, several of them very similar to each other.
• When Ford quotes people other than himself, he is very quick to point out spelling or grammatical mistakes and similar minor errors, asserting that it is ‘not promising’ and implying or outright stating that such mistakes undermine the author’s credibility. This attitude would be just as unwarranted but slightly more excusable if he had never fallen prey to such errors himself. I can assure you after reading this book that he has done, more than once. (I am not suggesting such errors in and of themselves undermine his credibility; I am suggesting that his implications of this exact idea against others is hypocritical.)
• Ford had apparently had “his” aquatic theory for “decades” before deciding to publish it. When he finally did decide to publish, he was in such a rush that he openly states that he just didn’t have time for “conventional peer-review” (a process he is deeply suspicious of) and actively avoided it. I would have had more sympathy if he had attempted peer-review, been rejected (which he claims would be inevitable), and then published in an alternative source anyway. Avoiding scrutiny from the get-go does not seem to be a sign of someone interested in discussion, despite his claims to the contrary.
• Fossils of one particular dinosaur, Spinosaurus, have been found to show evidence of an aquatic lifestyle. Ford extrapolates from this that there is evidence that all dinosaurs were aquatic. I find this a questionable line of reasoning. You could just as well say that since whales are aquatic, so are all mammals. Evidence is needed from a wider range of species, surely? (Evidence other than, well they were really big.)
• Also relating to Spinosaurus: Ford repeatedly calls into question paleontologists’ views on this dinosaur due to the scarcity of fossils, then confidently asserts his own views on it as though they are utterly beyond reproach. Where he gets his own evidence from is not explained.
• I am genuinely interested in Ford’s theories relating to smaller dinosaurs. Most of his arguments are based on the difficulty the very largest dinosaurs would have had living on dry land. He does not go into any detail about smaller dinosaurs.
• Ford says that as paleontologists are not experienced zoologists, they can have very little idea how living animals move, behave, etc. It’s simply not their area of expertise, so their ideas are bound to be wrong. I would remind you here that Ford is not a zoologist either, or a paleontologist. This argument therefore comes across as fairly hypocritical to me.
• At one point when discussing a lecture he gave, Ford states that a paleontologist who was attending did not ask any questions, but instead “had his male friend” do it. Why, I must ask, does Ford find the gender of the friend relevant?
• Not an issue exactly, more just… wow, does Ford have it in for fictional representations of dinosaurs. Given his overall stance and ideas, I get his ire towards representations which are supposed to be factual/realistic, and which he disagrees with, but this isn’t even limited to things like Jurassic Park, let alone actual documentaries. He really, really does not like unrealistic cartoons. He makes several references to an unnamed Disney dinosaur which he takes particular issue with (I am assuming he means either Dinosaur or The Friendly Dinosaur) as being unrealistic, and just… It’s an animated kids’ film, dude. God help you if you ever watch A Bug’s Life.
In all, I am glad I read this book. Some of the ideas put forward were interesting to think about, whether or not they are correct, and certainly the first half was a decent history lesson. I’m not a paleontologist. I have my personal views, but I can’t reliably speak for how credible or otherwise any given theory is, I just find it interesting to know what they are. So, I don’t regret reading this, despite the low star rating.
The trouble is that Ford’s theories are presented in such a relentlessly self-aggrandising way that it is difficult to consider them objectively. At no point is evidence from the opposing view presented and argued against; the fact that there might even be evidence is simply roundly dismissed. Ford constantly accuses just about anyone who disagrees with him of bad science, and then seems to commit the exact same mistakes himself hardly a page later. A great deal of the second part of the book is taken up by extensively quoting himself and almost gleefully describing the various times other people have disagreed with him online. Despite his reported desire for a “balanced debate”, what Ford really seems to want is that everyone just drops everything and decides they agree with him, and laud him for the hero he clearly wants to be – and sees himself as. That being said, he also seems to genuinely enjoy it when other scientists disagree with him – the more vehemently the better – because then he has the opportunity to respond in kind. As such, I doubt he would be disappointed by this book’s average rating (at the time of writing this review, 2.40 stars).
Potentially interesting basis for discussion on different theories, very off-putting tone.