Michelle P. Brown
Bodleian Library
An eminent scholar’s detailed, extensively illustrated account of traditions and treasures forged in the what were far from Dark Ages, including the Alfred Jewel, the Book of Durrow, the Lindisfarne Gospels and other works of undimmed beauty that would have such an influence on 19th- and 20th-century art movements and the imaginations of museum-haunters everywhere. An account, should anyone need reminding in post-Brexit times, of islands that have always been sites of migration and the adoption of far-flung influences.
Tamara Sonn
Polity
Forget Geert Wilders and his only apparently more reasonable fellow travellers, says Georgetown University scholar Sonn in this short work. It’s not Islam that is the problem but politics, she argues, noting that jihadists are outliers, most of their victims are co-religionists, and their approach is more Maoist than Muslim. Taking in the Charlie Hebdo attacks, just war theory, Palestinian refugees, Chechnya and East Timor, she contends that addressing “basic human rights including access to food, healthcare, education, and political participation” is the only way to ensure that neither terrorists nor Islamophobes can exploit grievances to foment hatred between Muslim and non-Muslim communities.
Robert J. Sternberg, Susan T. Fiske and Donald J. Foss, editors
Cambridge University Press
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Big names (Daniel Kahneman, Roy Baumeister) are a given, but the best of these essays exceed expectations, offering the enthusiastic first-person accounts you’d hope to hear if you had the chance to collar one of these scientists and ask about the curiosity that drives them. Standouts include those from Carol Dweck, Michael Davis, Susan Carey, Uta Frith, Richard Nisbett and Michael Gazzaniga (“I was captivated: captivated by Caltech, by Sperry, by research, and by all the questions that split-brain research had engendered”). Highly recommended.
Tim Birkhead
Bloomsbury
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Spurred to write this book by a television presenter’s confident recounting of a long-disproven myth about guillemots’ eggs, Birkhead’s enthusiasm for this “everyday miracle of nature” is infectious and his erudition lightly worn. A clutch of tales of Alfred Russel Wallace, John Clare on the “pen-scribbled o’er” pigments of yellowhammers’ eggs, albumen and the “microbe war”, “millionaire oologist” Johnnie du Pont, physiological polyspermy, and Birkhead’s own adventures on wind-whipped Skomer Island studying the guillemots that have occupied him for 40 years make for a magical account.
Peter Gilliver
Oxford University Press
“Chapman, however, was having none of it. He knew all too well the ruinous financial consequences of allowing Un to expand to such a scale; and upon his return from America he once again tried to enlist the help of an independent but authoritative figure in bringing Craigie to heel. He wrote to Henry White, the Dean of Christ Church, setting out his view of the situation…” High drama among stern lexicographers, haughty helmsmen, treacherous protégés and naive deputy editors; words spurious (“cherisaunce”) and malicious (“magnificent fossil”); Kingsley Amis taking against the Second Supplement to the Second Edition; fleeting glimpses of actual women: it’s all here for the fossicking in this exhaustive tale of the OED from 1884 to the present, told by one of its editors.
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