Great Home Reference …
This book was reviewed as part of Amazon's Vine program which included a free advance copy of the book.
DK’s HUMAN ANATOMY is great graphic reference for a general understanding of the human body.
The book is divided into three main sections, each with a designated color page corner for “easy reference”:
1) “The Integrated Body” – serves as an introductory chapter that explains human genetics, the human cell, body composition and an overview of the body’s systems.
2) “Body Systems” – the “meat and potatoes” of the book. A thoroughly detailed graphic presentation of the human body (skeletal, neuro, lymphatic, muscular, cardiovascular, reproductive, etc.). All organs and systems are shown with multiple annotations accompanying each graphic. Visually enticing and thoroughly notated, it is easy to get wrapped up in simply flipping pages.
3) “Imaging the Body” – Explains the various manners in which the body can be imaged to detect ailments, monitor the effects of treatments and discover/understand the progression of disease.
I found the book to be highly informative and interesting … a superb reference for the family library. It examines every aspect of the human body and does back up its claim as “the definitive visual guide”. I have yet to see a book as thorough. I think the benefit of this book is using it as a means to understanding how the human body operates as a whole rather than a medical guide to diagnose ailments/injuries. However, seeing how the various systems work independently and together can provide enough information to piece together a rudimentary understanding of how/why some ailments can/do occur.
My only real issue with the book is how it is organized. I wish the “Body Systems” section was broken-down so the various systems could be located easier (rather than sifting through 200 green-tabbed pages for specific systems). A smaller issue is with the annotations … they serve mostly to identify/name particulars. While some of the annotations do explain functions, I would have liked to see more of the explanatory annotations throughout the book.
Aside from a few minor issues, I can’t find a reason NOT to own this book. It’s over-sized, interesting, impressively visual, highly-detailed and educational … an essential reference for every home.