Faith Middleton Archive
Alex & Me
By Irene Pepperberg
Our Shelf Talker
If you are an animal lover, or not, this book is fascinating and quite tender. It is the story of how Dr. Irene Pepperberg spent 30 years in partnership with an African parrot, Alex, and was the first person to find a depth of intelligence in these parrots. A jaw-dropping story.- Robyn
Special Topics in Calamity Physics
By Special Topics in Calamity Physics
Our Shelf Talker
I am amazed at how delightful this book is. I’m planning to give it to my fifteen year oldgranddaughter. The story is about a young girl whose father is a visiting professor at Harvard. Her favorite teacher in high school is killed and the whole thing is quite mysterious and takes some time to unravel. What Pessl does is drench this book in a literary kind of fashion. It’s rich in texture with a fascinating story and the characters are brilliant.
- Lee
The Reluctant Mr. Darwin: An Intimate Portrait of Charles Darwin and the Making of His Theory of Evolution
By David Quammen
Charles Darwin took 20 years to write his theory of natural selection: he produced On the Origin of Species only on learning that he was about to be scooped. Was he a chronic procrastinator? Or was he afraid of the reaction of his peers, who had scorned earlier books on the "transmutation" of species? A bit of both came into play, but as acclaimed science journalist Quammen ( Song of the Dodo ) shows, during those two decades, Darwin was busy conducting scientific research that would bolster his observations of the finches and mockingbirds of the Galápagos Islands. He raised pigeons and theorized that domestic varieties could be traced back to a species of wild dove. He floated asparagus seeds in saltwater to explain how plants moved from one continent to another. Quammen commences his portrait with Darwin's homecoming from his five-year trip on the Beagle and then focuses on how he gained enough confidence and evidence to publish a book that would displace humankind from its privileged position as a special creation. This often slyly witty book stands out among the flood of books being published for Darwin's bicentenary.


