Eine packende Reise zur dunklen Seite der Tierwelt. Attacken wilder Tiere auf den Menschen sind vielfältig und grausam. Die Hyäne, die ihr Opfer im Gesicht packt und aus dem Zelt zerrt. Der tollwütige Fuchs, der den Arm einer Joggerin nicht loslässt. Hier sind die gewaltigsten und gefährlichsten Raubtiere zu Land und zu Wasser vereint - vom Elefanten, der allein einen Öltanker zerstörte, bis hin zum Bandwurm mit 25 Metern Länge.
Whether at a zoo, on a camping trip, or under our bedsheets, we are surrounded by animals. While most are perfectly harmless, it's the magnificent exceptions that populate The Book of Deadly Animals. Award-winning writer Gordon Grice takes readers on a tour of the animal kingdom from grizzly bears to great white sharks, big cats to crocodiles. Every page overflows with astonishing facts about Earth's great predators and unforgettable stories of their encounters with humans, all delivered in Grice's signature dark comic style. Illustrated with awe-inspiring photographs of beasts and bugs, this wondrous work will horrify, delight, and amaze.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Whether at a zoo, on a camping trip, or under our bedsheets, we are surrounded by animals. While most are perfectly harmless, it's the magnificent exceptions that populate The Book of Deadly Animals. Award-winning writer Gordon Grice takes readers on a tour of the animal kingdom from grizzly bears to great white sharks, big cats to crocodiles. Every page overflows with astonishing facts about Earth's great predators and unforgettable stories of their encounters with humans, all delivered in Grice's signature dark comic style. Illustrated with awe-inspiring photographs of beasts and bugs, this wondrous work will horrify, delight, and amaze.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Did he say repugnatorial gland? What a wealth of information Gordon Grice is, and what a fine, beguiling writer. This book is a must for anyone even remotely thinking of getting a monkey, a sea lion, or, heaven forbid, a dog. David Sedaris
When it comes to the most deadly animals on the planet it is best to be prepared! Forewarned is forearmed! Bear Grylls, host of Man vs. Wild
I read with my dog in my lap and my heart in my throat. It s a wonderful, slightly terrifying, utterly captivating encounter with the animal world not quite like anything I ve ever read before. Elizabeth Gilbert
A fresh, strange, and wonderful new voice in American nature writing. Michael Pollan
Gordon Grice writes about animals with a wit that relies on tone of voice, his ironically exact diction and an instinct for analogy he has a scholar s precision and a fourth-grader s enthusiasm. Michael Sims, The Washington Post
To weave the facts so artistically together as Mr. Grice has done takes considerable talent and a keenly felt interest. Meredith Greene, San Francisco Book Review
Grice tempers his book with grim humor, a genuine enthusiasm for the subject, and fascinating trivia (Herman Melville s Moby Dick was based on an actual whale named Mocha Dick that terrorized the South Pacific). A gifted writer, Grice s relentlessly detailed descriptions of the effects of spider and snake bites, as well as the outcome of tangling with pencil catfish or alligators, may make this rough going for the easily squeamish, but those with a fascination for wildlife will find this an informative and dramatic study. Publishers Weekly
Taps nicely into our enduring, awed fascination with nature s predators and the popularity of TV shows such as The Crocodile Hunter. . . . Grice has been dubbed the Stephen King of nature writers.' The Bookseller
When it comes to the most deadly animals on the planet it is best to be prepared! Forewarned is forearmed! Bear Grylls, host of Man vs. Wild
I read with my dog in my lap and my heart in my throat. It s a wonderful, slightly terrifying, utterly captivating encounter with the animal world not quite like anything I ve ever read before. Elizabeth Gilbert
A fresh, strange, and wonderful new voice in American nature writing. Michael Pollan
Gordon Grice writes about animals with a wit that relies on tone of voice, his ironically exact diction and an instinct for analogy he has a scholar s precision and a fourth-grader s enthusiasm. Michael Sims, The Washington Post
To weave the facts so artistically together as Mr. Grice has done takes considerable talent and a keenly felt interest. Meredith Greene, San Francisco Book Review
Grice tempers his book with grim humor, a genuine enthusiasm for the subject, and fascinating trivia (Herman Melville s Moby Dick was based on an actual whale named Mocha Dick that terrorized the South Pacific). A gifted writer, Grice s relentlessly detailed descriptions of the effects of spider and snake bites, as well as the outcome of tangling with pencil catfish or alligators, may make this rough going for the easily squeamish, but those with a fascination for wildlife will find this an informative and dramatic study. Publishers Weekly
Taps nicely into our enduring, awed fascination with nature s predators and the popularity of TV shows such as The Crocodile Hunter. . . . Grice has been dubbed the Stephen King of nature writers.' The Bookseller
Did he say repugnatorial gland? What a wealth of information Gordon Grice is, and what a fine, beguiling writer. This book is a must for anyone even remotely thinking of getting a monkey, a sea lion, or, heaven forbid, a dog. David Sedaris
When it comes to the most deadly animals on the planet it is best to be prepared! Forewarned is forearmed! Bear Grylls, host of Man vs. Wild
I read with my dog in my lap and my heart in my throat. It s a wonderful, slightly terrifying, utterly captivating encounter with the animal world not quite like anything I ve ever read before. Elizabeth Gilbert
A fresh, strange, and wonderful new voice in American nature writing. Michael Pollan
Gordon Grice writes about animals with a wit that relies on tone of voice, his ironically exact diction and an instinct for analogy he has a scholar s precision and a fourth-grader s enthusiasm. Michael Sims, The Washington Post
To weave the facts so artistically together as Mr. Grice has done takes considerable talent and a keenly felt interest. Meredith Greene, San Francisco Book Review
Grice tempers his book with grim humor, a genuine enthusiasm for the subject, and fascinating trivia (Herman Melville s Moby Dick was based on an actual whale named Mocha Dick that terrorized the South Pacific). A gifted writer, Grice s relentlessly detailed descriptions of the effects of spider and snake bites, as well as the outcome of tangling with pencil catfish or alligators, may make this rough going for the easily squeamish, but those with a fascination for wildlife will find this an informative and dramatic study. Publishers Weekly
Taps nicely into our enduring, awed fascination with nature s predators and the popularity of TV shows such as The Crocodile Hunter. . . . Grice has been dubbed the Stephen King of nature writers.' The Bookseller
When it comes to the most deadly animals on the planet it is best to be prepared! Forewarned is forearmed! Bear Grylls, host of Man vs. Wild
I read with my dog in my lap and my heart in my throat. It s a wonderful, slightly terrifying, utterly captivating encounter with the animal world not quite like anything I ve ever read before. Elizabeth Gilbert
A fresh, strange, and wonderful new voice in American nature writing. Michael Pollan
Gordon Grice writes about animals with a wit that relies on tone of voice, his ironically exact diction and an instinct for analogy he has a scholar s precision and a fourth-grader s enthusiasm. Michael Sims, The Washington Post
To weave the facts so artistically together as Mr. Grice has done takes considerable talent and a keenly felt interest. Meredith Greene, San Francisco Book Review
Grice tempers his book with grim humor, a genuine enthusiasm for the subject, and fascinating trivia (Herman Melville s Moby Dick was based on an actual whale named Mocha Dick that terrorized the South Pacific). A gifted writer, Grice s relentlessly detailed descriptions of the effects of spider and snake bites, as well as the outcome of tangling with pencil catfish or alligators, may make this rough going for the easily squeamish, but those with a fascination for wildlife will find this an informative and dramatic study. Publishers Weekly
Taps nicely into our enduring, awed fascination with nature s predators and the popularity of TV shows such as The Crocodile Hunter. . . . Grice has been dubbed the Stephen King of nature writers.' The Bookseller