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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Jaw-dropping glimpse of a lost world
Full-page large-format photographs of Hawaii's unique creatures. It is not exactly nature photography, but rather, very intimate portraits of beings, plants and animals, on the edge of extinction, found nowhere else in the world but Hawaii. The color and print quality are glorious. One can only hope that this book develops a fondness from the viewer toward the denizens...
Published on October 17, 2001

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4 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Pretty pictures but don't trust the text
The pictures of rare Hawaiian plants and animals in "Remains of a Rainbow" are pretty.
Pretty uninformative. And the text is largely nonsense.
The tipoff is "rich volcanic soil." When you see that in a book about Hawaiian natural history, you know right away that the author made no effort to learn his subject.
Just a few paragraphs away, we run into a...
Published on November 7, 2006 by Harry Eagar


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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Jaw-dropping glimpse of a lost world, October 17, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai'i (Hardcover)
Full-page large-format photographs of Hawaii's unique creatures. It is not exactly nature photography, but rather, very intimate portraits of beings, plants and animals, on the edge of extinction, found nowhere else in the world but Hawaii. The color and print quality are glorious. One can only hope that this book develops a fondness from the viewer toward the denizens of this lost world that can motivate the political will to save and restore it---money to eradicate Miconia that threatens them all, programs to replant native Hawaiian forest, and programs to protect the land from introduced cattle, goats, sheep, deer, and subdivisions. Otherwise, in another generation, children will read this book, and all we will be able to say to them, "See what we once had."
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai`i, October 19, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai'i (Hardcover)
This book is very likely the best and only opportunity for readers or travelers to experience the rarest of Hawai`i's unique native biodiversity. About 1/3 of all the species on the U.S. Endangered Species List are from Hawai`i - the second smallest (in geographic area) state in the union. Most of these species are so rare and exist in such remote and inaccessible areas of the Hawaiian islands that 99.999% of U.S. citizens (or even visitors to the 50th state) will never see them live and in situ - in their native habitat. David Liittschwager's and Susan Middleton's exquisitely detailed portraits (both photographers worked in the New York studio of acclaimed artist Richard Avedon) of some of the rarest and most photogenic of Hawai`i's endemic biota intimately present each of these beautiful plant and animal species as globally unique individuals worthy of human consideration and protection. The accompanying text, by Liittschwager and Middleton, eloquently describe the painstaking process of creating studio quality portraits of plants and animals so rare and endangered that, in many cases, only one or a handful of individuals exist in the wild with none in captive breeding or propagation facilities. Factual notes and species descriptions by established scientific authorities in the field of Hawaiian conservation biology are included.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Spectacular Photographs, April 27, 2002
By 
Bryan Vacinek "bryanv" (St. Louis Park, MN USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai'i (Hardcover)
This book contains some of the most spectacular photographs you've seen. Close-ups even a pro would seldom come close to. It's unlikely you'll see many of these in your travels, but it feels like your walking through a Hawaiian tropical jungle as you page through the book. Many of the pages would look great framed for your walls. This is the perfect coffee table book, all of my friends have picked it up and marveled over the interesting plants and flowers, even the non-gardeners. <grin>
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars WOW, WOW, WOW, WOW, February 24, 2003
By 
Benjamin D. Reed (Kerhonkson, New York United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai'i (Hardcover)
WOWS on every page. I gave this book to my Mother and Aunt for X-Mass. I wanted one for myself but ran out of cash (dag nab it) This is one of the most AMAZING nature books ever. If you need some brownie points give this as a gift, it will keep you out of the Dog House for YEARS.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars beautiful, December 30, 2010
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i haven't even taken the time to read the book - the pictures are all i care about - they are AMAZINGLY beautiful, so is their other compilation - ARCHIPELAGO
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Book, January 18, 2007
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We first saw the hard-back version of this book in the museum on the island of Kauai. We thought it was a wonderful hardback book, but the museum tols us that it could cost $150.00 and was no longer available in any form. Luckily we found it on Amazon in soft cover (which is more than adequate) and for much less money. Truely a beautiful and informative book!
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Don't get me wrong....., January 17, 2006
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E. Shinagawa (Kaua'i, Hawai'i) - See all my reviews
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Now don't get me wrong. This is a wonderful book with beautiful photographs of Native Plants and Animals of Hawaii. The only thing wrong with the Softcover version is that the cover creases so easily. So if you want this book for your own personal library the Hardcover version is preferred. But if it is used as it is meant to be, as a coffee table book, than this is the book to have.
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3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Should be 10 stars, November 3, 2001
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Tom (Volcano, HI USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai'i (Hardcover)
This may be the only opportunity for most of us to see most of these species, and what a way to see them! To say it's the most beautiful book I have ever seen would be the understatement of the year.
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4 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Pretty pictures but don't trust the text, November 7, 2006
This review is from: Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai'i (Hardcover)
The pictures of rare Hawaiian plants and animals in "Remains of a Rainbow" are pretty.
Pretty uninformative. And the text is largely nonsense.
The tipoff is "rich volcanic soil." When you see that in a book about Hawaiian natural history, you know right away that the author made no effort to learn his subject.
Just a few paragraphs away, we run into a rhapsody about the ancient Hawaiians' respect for the "unity and balance of the natural world." Large, slow, tasty birds excepted, of course.
The text by photographers David Liitschwager and Susan Middleton (assisted by Maui poet W.S. Merwin in an ill-informed introduction) is the verbal equivalent of kudzu -- an exotic, boring growth that smothers the interesting natural stuff underneath. Green goo.
It is understandable why the sponsors of "Remains" -- Environmental Defense and the National Geographic Society -- pander this way. It is not so easy to sell Hawaii's endangered plants and animals on their merits. After all, you and I are not likely ever to encounter most of them.
Which raises a question: If none of us is going to meet them except in the pages of a book, why bother to preserve them in nature? A small herb that was never known to exist until three or four years ago, and which was down to maybe five or 10 individuals then, is not going to alter the islands' ecosystem if it disappears.
One answer to that question is the last word in this book, taken from the writings of the late Maui biologist Wayne Gagne: "We are in pursuit of environmental quality, an ethical stance where our native biota is concerned, and for accepting each natural ecosystem on the planet for what it is . . . each a unique result of multifaceted ecological processes, past, present and continuing."
Fine words, but Liittschwager, Middleton and their sponsors obviously do not believe they can sell them. So instead of marketing Hawaii for what it is -- a unique place -- they peddle the ecological situation here, which is grim enough in fact, as part of a crisis "of declining biodiversity worldwide."
This is the "sixth great extinction" argument, one of those resilient popular ideas for which there is little evidence. People holding such views can find themselves in paradoxical situations.
Middleton, who blows the tin horn of mass extinctions louder than Liittschwager, writes about how after 15 years of working with endangered species, none she had encountered had yet gone extinct. Until Clermontia peleana.
But it turns out that while Clermontia peleana, a Big Island plant, probably is extinct in the wild, it is not yet quite extinct from the Earth.
Middleton does not seem to find any contradiction in simultaneous belief that the world is in the midst of the biggest extinction crisis in 65 million years and the fact that even a specialist in endangered species has yet to encounter one that passed on.
Considering that outsiders Liittschwager and Middleton had the cooperation of dozens of Hawaii's best biologists, they could easily have done better.
For one thing -- and this is another tipoff that the writers have not done their homework -- if they had listened to local experts, they would not have made such a big deal of Hawaii's biological diversity. To call islands with no amphibians, no reptiles, no pines and no ants diverse is perverse.
Instead of revealing and reveling in Hawaii's strange status -- its untypical ecological situation makes it the greatest natural laboratory of evolution -- Liitschwager and Middleton went for the picturesque and shallow.
Their pictures are gorgeous but don't tell much. They mostly were shot against solid backgrounds and display only a part of the organism. There is little hint of how each species functions within its community.
The misleading text of Liittschwager and Middleton is somewhat corrected by thumbnail descriptions of the 142 species illustrated, which were written by local authorities and are reliable.
"Remains of a Rainbow" represents the work of years, with the combined support for publishing from Environmental Defense, the National Tropical Botanical Garden and The Nature Conservancy of Hawaii; along with the on-the-ground help of NTBG, Maui Land & Pineapple Co. and other public-spirited groups.
In an afterword, David Wilcove, senior ecologist of Environmental Defense, writes that the survival of species in desperate straits will rely on "above all, public education."
"Remains of a Rainbow" is so far from contributing to public education that readers will end up knowing less about Hawaii after reading the book than they did before.

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Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai'i
Remains of a Rainbow: Rare Plants and Animals of Hawai'i by David Liittschwager (Hardcover - October 1, 2001)
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