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A01=Desmond Morris
ancient
animals
art
artists
Author_Desmond Morris
barn
birds
Category=JBFU
Category=WNCB
cultural history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
film
folktales
global understanding
good and evil
great horned
historical context
hunters
illustrated texts
illustrations
international
legends
literary representations
literature
long-eared
medicinal
myths
natural contexts
nature
owls
popular culture
predators
prehistoric
screech
short-eared
snowy
species
symbolic
tribal
true
tufted
typical
unusual
worldwide

Product details

  • ISBN 9781861895257
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 135 x 190mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 2009
  • Publisher: Reaktion Books
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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‘The owls are not what they seem.’ From ancient Babylon to Edward Lear's The Owl and the Pussycat and the grandiloquent, absent-minded Wol from Winnie the Pooh to David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, owls have woven themselves into the fabric of human culture from earliest times. Beautiful, silent, pitiless predators of the night, possessing contradictory qualities of good and evil, they are enigmatic creatures that dwell throughout the world yet barely make their presence known. In his fascinating new book, bestselling author and broadcaster Desmond Morris explores the natural and cultural history of one of nature’s most popular creatures. Morris describes the evolution, the many species, and the wide spread of owls around the world - excluding Antarctica, owls are found on every land mass, and they range in size from 28 centimetres (the Least Pygmy Owl) to more than 70 centimetres tall (the Eurasian Eagle Owl). As a result of their wide distribution, owls also occur in the folk-tales, myths and legends of many native peoples, and Morris explores all these, as well as the many examples of owls in art, film, literature and popular culture. A new title by an acclaimed author, and featuring many telling illustrations from nature and culture, Owl will appeal to the many devotees of this emblematic bird. Despite the fact that many have never seen or even heard an owl, he illustrates through this enticing read that the owl’s presence is still very real to us today.
Desmond Morris is a world-renowned zoologist and television presenter, and the author of many best-selling books on human and animal behaviour, including Cats in Art (Reaktion, 2017). He has also written four books in Reaktion’s Animal series.

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