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Astonishing Animals: Extraordinary Creatures and the Fantastic Worlds They Inhabit
 
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Astonishing Animals: Extraordinary Creatures and the Fantastic Worlds They Inhabit [Hardcover]

Tim Flannery (Author), Peter Schouten (Illustrator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 24, 2004
From the authors of A Gap in Nature, a breathtaking visual adventure showcasing ninety of the world's most astounding creatures.
Sumptuous birds of paradise, amazing soft-shell turtles, frogs that look like tomatoes, and terrifying fish (including the deep-water angler fish from Finding Nemo) are just some of the extraordinary creatures that can be found in Tim Flannery and Peter Schouten's new book, Astonishing Animals.
Superbly illustrated in lifelike full-color paintings, Astonishing Animals details ninety of the world's most amazing animals from around the world. In this book you will find the Hairy Seadevil, the spectacular Sulawesi Naked Bat, and in the depths of the limestone caves in Slovenia, the Olm, a pink, four-legged, sightless salamander that lives for a hundred years. In fascinating vignettes, Flannery offers the true evolutionary tale of how each of these bizarre creatures came to look the way they do. Alongside each historical account is a stunning hand-painted color reproduction (life-size in the original painting) by Schouten.
Filled with purple-faced apes, jagged-toothed dolphins, and antlered lizards, Astonishing Animals is a remarkable collection of the world's most incredible creatures and the stories behind their remarkable survival into a modern age.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Flannery, a scientist, museum director and author (The Eternal Frontier), and Schouten, a Whitney award–winning wildlife painter, team up again (after 2001's A Gap in Nature) to offer this spectacular look at 97 creatures who "represent, in one way or another, the outer limits of life's progress." (Actually, 96: one of these animals, they tease, is imaginary.) Some, like the deep sea–dwelling hairy sea devil ("every bit as repulsive as its name suggests"), are products of their extreme environments; others, such as the blue bird of paradise, exhibit exceptional efforts at sexual attraction (the male bird dances while hanging upside-down from a branch, pulsing his feathers hypnotically and emitting "an intense, rhythmic buzzing"). Evolutionary pressures have made some very different creatures look remarkably alike, such as the long-beaked echidna (a mammal), the kiwi (a bird) and the mormyrid (a fish), which all feed on a similar diet of worms. There are beauties, such as the two-gram bee hummingbird; oddities, such as the white uakari, whose scarlet, very humanoid face earned it the nickname "the Englishman"; and grotesqueries, such as the Asian giant softshell turtle, which feeds on human corpses thrown into the Ganges River. All are rendered in masterful, full-color illustrations, some of which spill across two pages. Flannery's text is lively and informative, veering easily between droll descriptions and poignant warnings about disappearing habitats. As beautiful as it is fascinating, this book will be relished by animal lovers of all stripes.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Atlantic Monthly Press (September 24, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0871138751
  • ISBN-13: 978-0871138750
  • Product Dimensions: 11 x 9.7 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,207,586 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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44 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gorgeous artwork of bizarre and exotic animals, November 8, 2004
By 
Tim F. Martin (Madison, AL United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Astonishing Animals: Extraordinary Creatures and the Fantastic Worlds They Inhabit (Hardcover)
_Astonishing Animals_ by Tim Flannery and Peter Schouten is an absolutely gorgeous coffee-table sized book, a work of splendid artwork and informative and occasionally humorous text. Producers of the similarly excellent _A Gap in Nature_, the authors this time concentrate not on animals that became extinct in historical times but living, odd, extraordinary animals, many of them quite unfamiliar to me and I daresay many armchair naturalists.

The first section is titled "The Vertical Terrain" and focuses on animals in mountainous terrains, specifically tropical mountains, which can have habitats varying from snow and alpine meadow at the summit to lowland jungle at its base. We meet in this section the Ribbon-tailed Astrapia of New Guinea, a bird of paradise with the longest tail feathers relative to body size of any bird (they are over three times longer than the bird's body). Similarly unusual is the King of Saxony Bird of Paradise, also of New Guinea; in this species the brow plumes of the male bird are over twice the length of the bird's body, looking somewhat like very oddly shaped huge antennae.

The second section is titled "Motion Specialists," and focuses on species that move in innovative and unexpected ways. The Mysore Slender Loris of India is a lemur-like primate of the thorny acacia forest, notably in that it moves in a slow, deliberate manner, always keeping grasp of the branches with at least three of its limbs, always from above, never from below.

The third section is called "Food & Feeding" and details animals with unusual diets and feeding techniques. We meet the Dingiso, a ground-dwelling tree-kangaroo (as contradictory as that might sound) discovered by Flannery himself in 1994 in the wilds of New Guinea. Delacour's Langur from the forests of central Vietnam is a beautiful but poorly studied primate, boasting a "pot belly" which contains a large stomach that is capable of fermenting the leaves upon which it feeds. The Curlew-jawed Mormyrid of South America is a freshwater fish with a long proboscis and the ability to generate its own electric field; both are used by the fish to find its aquatic prey, information from both is sent to its brain, the largest relative to body weight of any fish. Pesquet's Parrot of New Guinea looks more like a vulture than a parrot, with a bald-head and a long bill, though it does not feed on dead animals but the droppings of cassowaries (specifically the undigested fruits seeds within the feces).

The fourth section is "Shape-shifters," focusing on animals of unusual shapes and sizes. The Oriental Bay Owl of southern Asia looks like, when at rest, a broken, lichen-covered branch, all but impossible to see. The garish-colored Tomato Frog of Madagascar looks like a ripe tomato, an example of convergent evolution with the poison arrow frogs of the Americas. The authors produce life-sized pictures of the bumble bee-sized Kitti's Hognosed Bat of Thailand and the Bee Hummingbird of Cuba (which weighs only two grams).

Section five is called "Habitat Specialists" and deals with extreme specialists. The Marsupial Mole, Naked Mole Rat, Pink Fairy Armadillo, and the Star-nosed Mole are all striking examples of convergent evolution from different continents. The Sail-Tailed Lizard of eastern Indonesia is a sail-backed river-dwelling lizard, a poorly studied animal that may be a freshwater analogue of the Galapagos Island Marine Iguana. The Asian Giant Softshell Turtle, as its name might suggest, is not protected by a hardshell at all, something that was dispensed with for mysterious reasons. It is able to live in the polluted Ganges River and the canals of Canton and Jakarta, feeding on just about anything. The Yellow-Headed Picathartes of West Africa is a bald-headed bird that feeds exclusively on insects that breed in bat guano.

The final section is titled "The Vertical Ocean" and has some of the most unusual animals and evocative illustrations in the book. The stars of this part are marine animals from both the surface waters and the deepest abyss. The male Strap-toothed Whale and the Dense-Beaked Whale produce huge overgrown, curving tusks that when fully developed permit their jaws to only open a few centimeters (it is not known how the up to 7 meter long animals continue to feed). The Crested Basketfish has highly developed pectoral and pelvic fins that produce a virtual net in front of its head, a device that is believed to either sieve the water or to enwrap prey. The nightmarish Stoplight Loosejaw looks like as if it has had its throat coat; its jaws, stripped down to skin, bone, and tendons are constructed to allow for extremely rapid action. The Jellyfaced Spookfish of the very deep Indian Ocean (found two and a half kilometers below the surface) appears to have a head made of jelly, so transparent one can see the veins and arteries carrying blood to its brain and mouth.

The authors caution that one of the 97 animals in the book is imaginary; completely made up just for the book. Several times when reading about an animal I had to stop and wonder if that was the animal that existed on in the imagination. Was it the 34 millimeter long Pygmy Chameleon? The Bougainville Monkey-Faced Bat (found in the remote Solomon Islands, having evolved large, hard, pointed teeth and chewing muscles so powerful that their skulls have developed bony crests, enabling the animal to tackle even young coconuts)? Or maybe the Falanouc of Madagascar, once classified as an insectivore but now recognized as an unusual carnivore, a vaguely fox-like animal that lives in small family groups or solitarily on the forest floor, feeding on frogs and insects? A beautiful and informative book, I highly recommend it as this work does not focus on what some have titled charismatic megafauna (i.e. over-exposed and well- known animals like lions or giant pandas) but often quite obscure animals, all of which are beautifully illustrated.
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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful book with some ugly animals!, July 19, 2005
This review is from: Astonishing Animals: Extraordinary Creatures and the Fantastic Worlds They Inhabit (Hardcover)
As a devoted amateur, vertebrate evolution is one of my hobbies, especially that of mammals. I am frequently the person my acquaintances come to, to ask questions about animals. Yet there were things in this book I had never heard of. Certainly the imaginary beast was one I hadn't heard of :D At first, my suspicion was that the one that the author claims would perhaps be named after him, would be imaginary. However, a little research on the web revealed that this animal exists, has since been named, and no, it isn't named after Tim Flannery. (A little web research easily revealed the true culprit, as well.)

The authors' sense of humor is not limited to the imaginary animal. There are other humorous notes, such as the Cape rain frog, which is included "because it is one of the silliest-looking creatures there is."

Another reviewer has already described the sections quite well, so I will not repeat that, but will just mention a few of the particular things that struck me about the contents.

A great many of the animals in the book are birds. I admit I don't know nearly as much about birds as I do about mammals, so I perhaps was more easily astonished than a regular birder might be. I also overdosed on birds a bit faster than someone who is fascinated by them might - I wanted to get on to the mammals. I found the inclusion of several different pheasants a bit repetitious, and likewise several different birds of paradise, but they are truly beautiful birds, and wanting more mammals is only my personal preference.

The illustrations are beautiful. I might have liked a few actual photographs, but many of these animals would have been difficult to photograph. I might also quibble with a few selections - pretty much everyone is familiar with the platypus, and many zoos now have colonies of naked mole rats. So, while interesting, these critters are no longer astonishing. On the other hand, some of the animals were truly astonishing: the curlew-jawed mormyrid, which looks an awful lot like an echidna for something that's a fish! And I really would not have believed in the existence of the dense-beaked whale if I hadn't gone to other resources and seen actual photographs of it. The stoplight loosejaw could give a person nightmares.

One of the really neat features is the exactly life-size pictures of the pygmy chameleon, the bee hummingbird, and the smallest bat in the world, along with the more-than-a-meter-long slender snipe-eel.

This book is often described as a "coffee table book" but it would make an excellent gift for any young person interested in animals and in need of a challenge to learn more about them, and whoever owns the book, child or adult, will leaf through it far more often than most coffee table books ever get opened.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars beautiful illustrations, July 18, 2009
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Phil Loubere (san jose, ca usa) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Astonishing Animals: Extraordinary Creatures and the Fantastic Worlds They Inhabit (Hardcover)
I'm a big fan of Peter Schouten's illustrations. This, and their other book - A Gap in Nature - are lovely works, and the subject matter captivating.
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