The quirky and profound international bestseller – a darkly astonishing scientific biography and a guide on how to live well in a world where chaos come for us all
‘A sumptuous, surprising, dark delight’ Carmen Maria Machado
‘Genre-defying . . . fast-moving, deftly balanced, full of surprises’ Guardian‘s Books of the Day
‘Her book took me to strange depths I never imagined, and I was smitten’ New York Times Book Review
‘A magical hybrid of science, portraiture and memoir’ Susan Orlean
‘Wholly unique and a true delight’ Refinery29
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If fish don’t exist, what else do we have wrong?
As a child, Lulu Miller’s scientist father taught her that chaos will come for us all. There is no cosmic destiny, no plan. Enter David Starr Jordan, 19th-century taxonomist and believer in order. A fish specialist devoted to mapping out the great tree of life, who spent his days pinning down unruly fins, studying shimmering scales and sealing new discoveries into jars of ethanol.
At a time when Lulu’s life is unravelling, David Starr Jordan beckons. Reading about Jordan’s sheer perseverance after an earthquake shattered his collection, Lulu stumbles upon an unexpected antidote to life’s unpredictability. But lurking behind the lore of this mighty taxonomist lies a darker tale waiting to be told: one about the human cost of attempting to define the form of things unknown.
This is a story unlike any other you’ve read before. It’s about a very tall man with a walrus moustache, the injustices and unexpected deliverances of the universe, love that strikes like lightning and about why fish don’t exist after all.
This genre-defying journey into the science of classification weaves memoir and history in shimmering prose * Guardian, Book of the Day * I want to live at this book's address: the intersection of history and biology and wonder and failure and sheer human stubbornness. What a sumptuous, surprising, dark delight -- Carmen Maria Machado, author of In the Dream House Her book took me to strange depths I never imagined, and I was smitten * New York Times Book Review * Here is a book that hops nimbly between biography and autobiography, gritty science and lovelorn self-help. And its final, happy leap into the unknown is just astonishing * Prospect Magazine * A story told with an open heart, every page of it animated by verve, nuance, and full-throated curiosity -- Leslie Jamison, author of Make It Scream, Make It Burn A bold and original blend of memoir and science, it combines the exhilaration of discovery with the unexpected and revelatory -- Elizabeth Buchan This book will capture your heart, seize your imagination, smash your preconceptions, and rock your world -- Sy Montgomery, author of The Soul of an Octopus Strangely compelling * The Times * Moves gracefully between reporting and meditation, big questions and small moments. A magical hybrid of science, portraiture, and memoir-and a delight to read -- Susan Orlean, author of The Library Book This book is perfect, just perfect. It's both lyrical and learned, personal and political, small and huge, quirky and profound -- Mary Roach, author of Stiff A tale so seductive that I read her book in one sitting * The Wall Street Journal * Stunning and brilliant and completely un-sum-up-able... I love this book so much! -- John Green, author of Turtles All the Way Down Remarkable... Lulu Miller draws a heartening lesson-that chaos, which comes for us all, can be defeated by sheer human stubbornness * Los Angeles Times * Wholly unique and a true delight * Refinery29 * A wild ride... that upends our idea of what fish (and we) are in the grand scheme of things * Slate * A touching blend of biography, science, philosophy and self-reflection. Like its provocative title, it's full of surprises -- Jonathan Balcombe, New York Times bestselling author of What a Fish Knows Engrossing... thought-provoking... Lulu Miller does the job with style and intelligence -- Chicago Review of Books Ingenious... A quirky wonder of a book * Kirkus Reviews * Quirky, fascinating * Daily Mail * The excitement and curiosity in which she sees and investigates the world is contagious * Economist Podcast * A brilliant meditation on uncertainty, resilience, and human error * Times Now *
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