
From Publishers Weekly
Rarely have humans ruminated so much about so little, as in the case of the dodo. As amateur naturalist Fuller points out in this precise, charming and beautifully illustrated volume, of all extinct beasts none, except perhaps a few dinos, grip the imagination like the chubby, swan-sized, flightless bird (a type of pigeon in fact) that Europeans first encountered on its island home of Mauritius, in the Indian Ocean, in 1598, and that was gone forever only 90 years later (a victim most likely of European predators both human and animal). Today all that remains of the dodo are some bones, a ravaged foot and head, and a few primary accounts and illustrations. Yet the dodo is wildly popular, mostly as an "icon of extinction," first spurred to prominence, Fuller explains, by Sir John Tenniel's illustrations for Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and now the subject of dozens of books, fiction and nonfiction, its image and name attached to nearly every type of object (from tea towels to notepads to houses); yet "genuine dodo literature...is characterized by its remarkably poor scholarship." Fuller rectifies that flaw here, explaining exactly what we do and don't know about the dodo, and reproducing important primary material, both words and pictures, as well as a handsome selection of secondary material. This is the fourth book Fuller has written about extinct birds (The Great Auk, etc.); with its smart, informed text, wealth of illustrations (200 color), very reasonable price and terrific subject, it's liable to be the most popular yet. Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Scientific American
Sailors from a group of Dutch ships that reached the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius in 1598 found dodo birds in considerable numbers along the coast. Forty years later the species was all but gone there, and by 1690 it was extinct everywhere. Fuller, a British painter interested in curiosities of natural history, tells the dodo's story with grace and many intriguing illustrations. Hard facts about the dodo are minimal. The bird was "a gigantic, flightless pigeon" with a massive beak, a large head and a tuftlike tail. But its exact appearance is uncertain because drawings made while it still lived are contradictory. Written accounts are "as tantalizing as the pictures." Having set out the few facts, Fuller goes on to describe the dodo's popularity in literature--and to give it an epitaph as "the ultimate symbol of what can go wrong when man and nature come together."
Editors of Scientific American
From Booklist
The dodo, arguably the single most famous extinct animal, was a flightless bird found only on the island of Mauritius, located northeast of Madagascar. Discovered by the Dutch in 1598 (though it was probably seen earlier by Portuguese and Arab sailors), this giant pigeon was extinct by 1660. Fuller, author of three previous books on extinct birds, here provides a comprehensive look at what little is known about the dodo. Very few specimens, and none intact, survive, so much of Fuller's text is based on writings from the period and illustrations that were made while the bird was still alive. The first chapter outlines the tragically brief history of the dodo's interactions with humans, and the second examines what is known (and what can be surmised) about the bird's natural history. Heavily illustrated with period and modern illustrations of the dodo--Fuller is a master at tracking down every representation of extinct birds--this memorial to an extinct species will be a welcome addition to large natural history collections. Nancy Bent
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