Lulu Miller’s “Why Fish Don’t Exist; A Story of Finding Our Way in a Chaotic World,” has been selected by Blackwell’s as their pick for the non-fiction Book of the Month for July 2025.
Why Fish Don’t Exist is Blackwell’s Pick for July
Lulu Miller’s “Why Fish Don’t Exist; A Story of Finding Our Way in a Chaotic World,” has been selected by Blackwell’s as their pick for the non-fiction Book of the Month for July 2025.
As a naturalist, I have a particularly wide range of interests across the natural history spectrum. Be the subject at hand fish or fern, tree or turtle, badger or bird, I’m keen to learn more about it. However there has long been one particular branch of the tree of life that has never previously – […]
Surrounded by stacks of Princeton’s most recent works across the many disciplines of natural history, out of the corner of my eye I noticed a book I couldn’t recall having yet known: Phil Chaon’s and Iain Campbell’s “Habitats of North America: A Field Guide for Birders, Naturalists, and Ecologists.”
Back in May of 2013, when the United States was not only still a nation with a functional government but one that led the world in advancements across a range of scientific fields, the first edition of Anne E. Greene’s “Writing Science in Plain English” was published by The University of Chicago Press.