How to Fly: Taking Wing with Birds, Bats, Insects and Humans
- Publisher : Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Our customers have not yet submitted a review for this title - click here to be the first to write a review
Description:
A unique and all-encompassing exploration of the wonders of flight and the way different species have evolved different solutions to the problem of defying gravity - including humans.
Flight fascinates us. We thrill to birds, we adore butterflies, we're baffled by bats, and we can hardly believe in pterodactyls. We worship angels, and we compare love, religious ecstasy and artistic achievement to flight. We love the idea of flight so much that we invented machines that at last allowed us to fly. Many died to make human flight possible.
In this book, bestselling writer Simon Barnes brings together all aspects of aerial life - evolution, technology, mythology, religion, nature and imagination - in a celebration of the wonders of flight. Barnes looks at the physics of flying and how flight has evolved quite separately four times over (or five, if we count humans). He examines how these creatures do it: from the nocturnal agility of bats and the bees that beat their wings 230 times per second, to the extinct reptile Quetzalcoatlus with its 10-metre wingspan and the Arctic terns that travel 75,000km every year. He also explores how the great poets, mystics, saints, musicians and athletes have all, in their different ways, succeeded in getting high and getting us high.
Sweeping in scope and packed with fresh insights, this is a book that sets free the eagle within us all.
You may also like...
Rereading Darwin's Origin of Species: The Hesitations of an Evolutionist
Delisle, R.G.; Tierney, J.
Price £24.99
(Save £4.00)
Cladistics: Perspectives on the Reconstruction of Evolutionary History
Duncan, T.; Stuessy, T.F. (Eds)
Price £12.00









