What are animals trying to say to us - and how we can learn to listen?
Science has shown us that animals communicate constantly and elaborately amongst themselves: bees exchange directions via 'waggle dances'; dolphins have a 'signature whistle' that functions like a human name; and fruit flies even have local dialects. But are they talking to us too? And could we ever learn to listen and understand what they're trying to say?
With the doggedness of a journalist, the soul of an animal lover, and the wonder of a curious intellect, Amelia Thomas pursues the answer, determined to better listen to her own menagerie (a horse, pony, chickens, dogs, cat, mice, goat and pigs). Taking us on her journey of discovery through the scientific, practical, and spiritual ways people today are trying to listen to animals, she meets with animal behaviourists, anthrozoologists, pet psychics, animal trainers, AI experts, indigenous trackers and psychologists - all of whom are listening in vastly different ways to vastly different species.
Filled with warm wit, fascinating stories, and surprising science, What Do Sheep Think About the Weather is an illuminating, playful, and personal quest to understand animals on their own terms, rather than through a human lens.
'Illuminating and entertaining from start to finish' Jonathan Balcombe, author of What a Fish Knows
'This easy-to-read, fact-filled and fun-filled book will open all of your senses' Marc Bekoff, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals
'A masterpiece and masterclass for all animals - human and nonhuman' Pilley Bianchi, author of For the Love of Dog
'Every single page of this marvellous book will challenge you, even enchant you ... I cannot recommend it highly enough' Jeffrey Masson, author of When Elephants Weep
Rezensionen / Stimmen
'Blend the lively, buoyant writing of an award-winning non-scientist with a boat-load of direct experiences with animals, and you have this book. I found it both illuminating and entertaining from start to finish.' Jonathan Balcombe, author of Super Fly and What a Fish Knows
'A must read for anyone interested in how nonhuman animals (animals) talk with one another and with us ... Based on the latest science, fascinating stories and personal reflections, this easy-to-read, fact-filled and fun-filled book will open all of your senses including your sense of awe and get you to wonder what it is like to be one of them in their worlds, not ours.' Marc Bekoff, author of The Emotional Lives of Animals
'Every single page of this marvellous book will challenge you, even enchant you ... I cannot recommend it highly enough.' Jeffrey Masson, author of When Elephants Weep
'Amelia Thomas is a powerful storyteller and has hit it out of the park in this contemporary anthology of our relationship with animals. From cuttlefish to cows, this brilliantly written and emotionally charged page-turner is a masterpiece and masterclass for all animals - human and nonhuman.' Pilley Bianchi, author of For the Love of Dog
Praise for The Zoo on the Road to Nablus
'Engaging, often inspiring and sometimes poignant' Daily Mail
'Beautifully written and entertaining' Washington Post
'Unique and fascinating' Publisher's Weekly
Sprache
Verlagsort
Maße
Höhe: 216 mm
Breite: 138 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-78396-923-4 (9781783969234)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Amelia Thomas is the author of The Zoo on the Road to Nablus, the true story of the last Palestinian zoo, a Daily Mail and Washington Post Critic's Choice. She has authored and contributed to over a dozen books for Lonely Planet, and her writing has appeared in the Washington Post, Sunday Times, Christian Science Monitor, Middle East Times and CNN Traveler. She was the host of a documentary about Israel and the West Bank in National Geographic Channel's "Roads Less Travelled" series. Thomas practices equine bodywork for several charitable organizations, and in addition to Cambridge University, she holds a diploma in Equine Psychology. Based in Canada, Amelia is British and has extensively travelled and lived around the world with her family.