Enjoy fast, FREE delivery, exclusive deals and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime
Try Prime
and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery
Amazon Prime includes:
Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.
Amazon Prime members enjoy:- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
- Instant streaming of thousands of movies and TV episodes with Prime Video
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
- Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Buy new:
$35.29$35.29
FREE delivery:
Thursday, May 18
Ships from: Amazon.com Sold by: Amazon.com
Buy used: $29.72
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Learn more
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
All Yesterdays: Unique and Speculative Views of Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Animals Paperback – November 27, 2012
| Price | New from | Used from |
- Kindle
$8.99 Read with Our Free App - Paperback
$35.2910 Used from $24.86 3 New from $35.29
Explore your book, then jump right back to where you left off with Page Flip.
View high quality images that let you zoom in to take a closer look.
Enjoy features only possible in digital – start reading right away, carry your library with you, adjust the font, create shareable notes and highlights, and more.
Discover additional details about the events, people, and places in your book, with Wikipedia integration.
Purchase options and add-ons
- Reading age1 year and up
- Print length100 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions8.5 x 0.24 x 8.5 inches
- Publisherlulu.com
- Publication dateNovember 27, 2012
- ISBN-101291177124
- ISBN-13978-1291177121
Frequently bought together

What do customers buy after viewing this item?
Product details
- Publisher : lulu.com; First Edition (November 27, 2012)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 100 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1291177124
- ISBN-13 : 978-1291177121
- Reading age : 1 year and up
- Item Weight : 9.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 8.5 x 0.24 x 8.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #61,975 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #4,167 in Arts & Photography (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

C. M. Kosemen is an artist and independent researcher born in Ankara, Turkey. He studied at Cornell University, Istanbul’s Sabancı University and holds a Masters’ degree from London’s Goldsmiths College in Documentary Film and Media Studies.
Kosemen’s areas of interest include surreal art, Mediterranean history, palaeontology, evolution, zoology and visual culture.
As an artist, Kosemen is affiliated with the Empire Project Gallery of Istanbul. His art has been displayed in exhibits in Catania, Vienna, Ulcinj, Istanbul, Ankara, London and Tel Aviv.
As a researcher, Kosemen’s book credits include Osman Hasan and the Tombstone Photographs of the Dönmes, from Libra Books of Istanbul. Copies of this book have been purchased by leading universities and research institutes of the world. It has won the Eduard-Duckesz History Prize.
Kosemen’s other book credits include All Yesterdays: Unique and Speculative Views of Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Animals, and the Cryptozoologion, the Biology, Evolution and Mythology of Hidden Animals from Irregular Books of London.
Kosemen was also an editor for Benetton’s Colors magazine and worked in various advertising agencies.

John Conway is an artist who specialises in prehistoric animals, surreal takes on internet culture, and bringing anachronisms to art history. His interest is in scientific understanding as an artistic value, but he is less pretentious than that sounds. John's work can be found in several books on palaeontological life. He lives in London, UK.

Darren Naish is an author, researcher and qualified scientist, based in England, UK, who writes about animals living and extinct. His special interests include dinosaurs, ancient marine reptiles, the flying pterosaurs, mystery animals, conservation biology and the portrayal of ancient animals in art. Dr Naish has published several books on all of these things: several more are in preparation.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on December 10, 2021
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
The central tenet of the book is that paleontological illustration, despite having undergone many changes over the decades, has largely fallen into a pattern of being both uninformed and uncreative, and that there is a better way - not just a way, but a way of thinking - in reconstructing these extinct animals. When we know an animal only from (often only parts of) the skeleton, we have to consider all of the plausible and interesting ways that the soft tissue and integument would have covered the bones in life, while still remaining true to the limitations of the skeleton and to inference from modern analogues and relatives. The same goes for behavior, which is very rarely preserved in the fossil record and for which most paleontography has been woefully narrow in its depictions. Birds, for instance - the closest living relatives of extinct dinosaurs - have an enormous variety of bizarre and beautiful integument that could not possibly be gleaned from bones alone. Birds also exhibit some of the most varied behaviors of any group of tetrapods, from nesting, to courtship, mating, exploration, and feeding. Why should this incredible wealth of artistic possibility be neglected in paleontological illustration?
All Yesterdays does a wonderful job exploring many types of these possible reconstructions through illustration and explanation. The book is divided into two main sections: the first, the eponymous bulk of the book, focuses on creative, unusual, but completely accurate reconstructions of various extinct animals (mostly dinosaurs) engaged in various behaviors and interactions. The majority of these are illustrated by John Conway, with his beautifully nuanced and atmospheric usage of color and light, and also includes a smattering of C.M. Koseman's colorful, clean-lined illustrations. Each scenario is accompanied by a lateral skeletal reconstruction by Scott Hartman, useful for comparing the illustrated animal in life to its bare bones, which should be hidden under layers of fat, feathers and fuzz.
This section draws attention to plausible but oft-ignored possibilities for paleontological illustration, such as the usage of cryptic camouflaging, signaling integument, play, and mating. The well-read dinosaur afficionado probably won't learn too much that's wholly new (though I did learn the term 'musth', which is apparently the animal equivalent of pon farr), but the illustrations are new enough, both in concept as well as actuality, as the book features a lot of Conway's work I'd never seen before. Some of the illustrations are just stunningly gorgeous - his Therizinosaurus, Heterodontosaurus and Tenontosaurus were especially striking to me.
The latter section of the book, cleverly titled "All Todays", is like the first half in reverse: it posits a hypothetical scenario in which intelligent alien researchers come to our planet in the distant future and are presented with only the skeletal remains of modern animals. How, then, will tomorrow's paleontological artists reconstruct the animals of today? This section is far more amusing and more whimsical than the first section, but it certainly does a good job of highlighting how ridiculous and constraining some of our paleontographical dogma is in reality when applied to modern animals whose appearance we're already familiar with. It points out specific pitfalls of modern dinosaur illustration, such as "shrink-wrapping" (wherein the skin is basically drawn directly over the skeleton, showing every nuance of skeletal anatomy) and pigeonholing tall neural spines as a "sail". When modern animals follow the same constraints that we unwittingly apply to our paleontological illustration, some frightening and quite nonexistent creatures emerge. Some of my favorites from this section are the shrink-wrapped cat (which is clearly a pack hunter and a predator of humans, since their skeletons will usually be found associated with human "nests"), the fluffy iguana, and the hummingbird parasite.
(I also enjoy the slightly wry, tongue-in-cheek manner in which most of the book is written. For instance, the line "Camarasaurus [...] is considered by some experts to be among the ugliest of all sauropods" brings to mind an image of a team of paleontologists sitting around their computer, writing a publication on what research has determined is The Ugliest Dinosaur.)
In conclusion: if you are even slightly interested in paleontography, I would highly recommend this book if for nothing more than the very novel viewpoint it takes on the field. For an illustrator of extinct animals or a researcher who relies on these illustrations, there are a lot of invaluable lessons to be learned from the material within. For everyone else, there are some really, really pretty pictures to look at.
I expected far more scientific meat to the book, considering there's 100 pages of it. The entries for each section, which read more like blog posts, can all be summarized as "nobody else depicted dinosaurs doing/as X, but we did! Look!" and come across as rather self-congratulatory. There's no real punchline, no particular new scientific insight besides "hey, why not?". The parts which go into detail are the ones where the authors take potshots at other authors, notably Kent "Neutral Necks" Stevens and David "Parasite Pterosaurs" Peters; this is all fine and good if they have a bone to pick with them, but it would have been nice if they had done the same with all the others. A lot of complaining is made about paleo-art, but I felt it was largely unfounded. There's a good reason why dinosaurs are typically shown in profile - so you can see what the animal looked like, instead of getting a weird perspective shot. There's a good reason why Microraptor is shown with its wing-feet exposed - because otherwise it looks like another ancient bird. Not that there's anything wrong with showing dinosaurs head-on or Microraptor in a more avian pose, but the rationale for doing so seemed pointless. The aside about Camarasaurus being ugly is probably amusing to fans of the author's blog, but is out of place in a book. Finally, I refuse to believe that their Tenontosaurus is in a Deinonychus-free landscape. They're probably behind the trees. Also Sibbick painted one without any dromaeosaurs in sight, but that's besides the point.
The problem, I think, is that paleo-art is devolving into one-upmanship, with each artist trying to outdo the other in terms of bizarre-yet-plausible reconstruction. And there's no attaining the level of Charles Knight or the Dinosaur Renaissance, so artists will have to keep coming up with ways to make their dinosaurs more and more bizarre-yet-plausible, while insisting that they're radical and heretic and whatnot. This book doesn't even go as crazy as it could have! It's almost conservative up against some of the screaming color schemes and fleshy, feathery additions done by other artists. There were paintings going around years back of sauropods with feathers, which are more heretical than anything put forth in this book.
The modern animals section, though, is the real draw of the book, and this time the authors are correct in claiming to be the first to do something like this. Looking through the different ways animals could be reconstructed from bones alone is highly entertaining, and that alone is worth the price of admission. Even though the authors do shoot themselves in the foot by putting fur on an iguana (so... isn't that what they're doing with dinosaur feathers on everything?).
In conclusion, I cannot recommend this book for the layman or for children (Stegosaurus copulation aside) due to the amount of backstory one would need to have to understand what's going on. A layman would be better served by seeing a therizinosaur or plesiosaur or Microraptor in a clearer form, before going on to see these. Or better yet, see them in a museum! The real audience for this would be the scientists, artists, and dinosaur fans looking for new spins on their favorite animals. For an alternative "what if" dinosaur scenario with more outlandish colors and scenarios, try "A Field Guide to Dinosaurs" by Gee and Rey. If you want an introduction to dinosaurs for children or the inexperienced, Holtz's "Dinosaurs" encyclopedia is still the best. I'm saying all this, and I'm still rating the book highly because I'm going to be staring at the gorgeous art for a long time.
Top reviews from other countries
If you have any interest in palaeontology, biology or anatomical art then I cannot recommend this book enough. The idea is an extremely simple one: take a look at how dinosaurs and other extinct creatures are most commonly portrayed and ask why? Yet, to my knowledge, no one else has actually addressed this fascinating topic, let alone produced a host of fantastic illustrations to go along with their counter-points. The quality of the illustrations does vary a little, but that's to be expected in a book with multiple contributors; plus, every piece has been cleverly designed to highlight a specific problem with your average palaeo-artist's work.
Frankly, if all this book contained was images of "classic" palaeo-art and the artist's re-imagined (yet equally plausible) take on the same scene it would be interesting enough, but the in depth discussion that accompanies each piece is often astonishing. Conway and Naish have a fantastic way of writing that captures their own excitement surrounding the subjects and also manages to be factual and educational. They're also not afraid to put their necks on the line, with some wonderfully weird ideas making the cut, nor admit to their/the field's failings and limitations when it comes to guesstimating appearance and behaviour from, ostensibly, rocks.
Then, of course, there is All Tomorrows. Though it occupies the end quarter of All Yesterdays, in many ways All Tomorrows is worthy of being a book just by itself. By juxtaposing the subject from the unknown creatures of the past to applying palaeo-art and speculative behaviour modelling to animals from the present, All Tomorrows serves both as a reminder that, ultimately, we're always bound to be a little bit wrong, as well as driving home the many problems with current palaeo-art techniques the book is initially set up to confront. Basically, I came for the images of protoceratops climbing trees, but I stayed for the nightmare that is vampiric baboons!
A fantastic book that will occupy a place of pride on my book shelf for many years to come.
When I was growing up they were either grey, brown or green and invariably scaly, and just didn't look like real animals. They were depicted in the same boringly cliched poses and activities. Even post Jurassic Park, when they suddenly sprouted feathers, they still looked like freakish, half-mummified chimaeras.
This informative, accessible book seeks to explain why, while delighting us with imaginative pictures of dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures caught being just as diverse and behaviourally interesting as extant animals.
It's split into two parts. The first reconstructs fossil animals while trying to avoid the common errors and limitations of past reconstructions. The second, more whimsical (and short) section illustrates the effect those errors and limitations can have by reconstructing modern animals from imperfect fossils.
The art is simple and lovely, the text easy to read without being dumbed down (the intro is actually the trickiest bit, and for the few potentially unfamiliar scientific terms used, there's a short glossary at the back. For the real enthusiasts, there's also a full bibliography for further reading). As a Kindle e book the colour pictures expand gloriously on a retina iPad, allowing you to see every brush stroke. It's great to see dinosaurs looking interesting at last, in all their weird, well-fed and occasionally cute glory!

















