bab reviewed The Book of Eels by Patrik Svensson
Review of 'The Book of Eels' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
Got a bit tedious in the end, I wanted a fact book on eels. This was like that for the first half but ended up trying to be too philosophical
Our Enduring Fascination with the Most Mysterious Creature in the Natural World
256 pages
English language
Published Feb. 26, 2020 by HarperCollins Publishers.
Got a bit tedious in the end, I wanted a fact book on eels. This was like that for the first half but ended up trying to be too philosophical
[TW: cruelty to animals, beyond simply plain fishing.]
First things first: eels truly are fascinating, not just in themselves but as an indicator of what a wondrous world we live in and how many mysteries remain. This book does a wonderful job covering the eel’s biology and the convoluted history of how humans have learned it, step by painstaking step. There’s much more: an informative and respectful deep dive into the life and work of Rachel Carson, and ditto but slightly less so on Sigmund Freud; personal memoir focusing on Svensson’s relationship with his father; musings on ecology; a baffling tangent on religion that I had to skip. Worthy subjects all, but the jumping-around between threads, in linear book form, did not work for me.
For a shorter, more focused intro to the fascination of eels, I emphatically recommend this Radiolab episode.