Are you someone who enjoyed reading Melissa Harrison’s “All Among the Barley,” “At Hawthorne Time,” or “Clay?”
Perhaps you’re a regular reader of her “Nature Notebook” column in The Times.
Are you someone who enjoyed reading Melissa Harrison’s “All Among the Barley,” “At Hawthorne Time,” or “Clay?”
Perhaps you’re a regular reader of her “Nature Notebook” column in The Times.
There are few nights of my life that I can recall when I have been more scared than I was the night I took up Kelly Brenner’s Nature Obscura. Reports of the SARS-CoV-2 virus spreading throughout the world had suddenly reached fever pitch with case numbers of COVID-19 being reported as skyrocketing where only a […]
For many years I have followed the natural history observations Kelly Brenner regularly posts to her Twitter feed. Her ability not only to notice but to absolutely revel in the small details of nature that many others would easily overlook is uncanny. So when I learned that she was writing a book, needless to say I was eager for it finally to be published so I could discover more about her remarkable perceptions of the natural world.
I recently received an email message from a reader who introduced himself as one to whom Dr. T.R. Shankar Raman was a much-respected mentor, enthusiastically recommending that I should consider Dr. Shankar Raman’s recently published book “The Wild Heart of India” for review. This being the first I had heard of the book’s publication, I began enquiries about it.