This is your story. This is everyone's story. This is the story of every living thing on Earth. And this is the story as you have never seen it before.
Douglas Palmer is a science writer, academic, and author of many books on paleontology, including Life Before Man and Graptolites: Writing in the Rock. In addition to writing numerous articles for leading journals such as Science and New Scientist, he teaches Natural and Earth Sciences at Cambridge University, England.
High school and adult public libraries will want to keep Evolution: The Story of Life (University of California, 978-0-520-25511-1) perennially open on a table as it can’t help but stop people in their tracks. Using illustrated diorama-like spreads, photographic sidebars, and concise text blocks, author Douglas Palmer and illustrator Peter Barrett chart the planet’s progress. From the “microbial mats” at Strelley Pool, Western Australia, 4650 million years ago, to the first magnolias 66 million years ago, to the present-day “geological revelation” of the Grand Canyon, Evolution brings temporal order to Darwin’s laws—”being Growth with Reproduction; Inheritance which is almost implied by reproduction.” Introductory sections on Darwin, fossils, and suggestions for how to use the book are followed by appendices charting the trees of life, a gazette of world fossil sites, species listings, and compact timelines. Evolution is an outstanding catalogue that makes comprehensible all life’s common ancestry without sacrificing complexity, abundance, or diversity.
Beautifully done. I love the illustrations, putting the various creatures in appropriate environments. I can almost visualize this as an interactive website with the way that the windows point to further description and remarkable fossil photos. My favorite section is the species listing, gorgeous photography. The only teeny tiny criticism is that many of the photos of the fossils are fairly small. Then again, if I want large photos of the fossils, this book provides plenty of information for me to get my Google on. The information on the various eras is sufficient to get a basic idea of what was going on. An incredible addition to my biology book collection.