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   Book Info

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Priceless: The Vanishing Beauty of A Fragile Planet  
Author: Bradley Trevor Greive
ISBN: 0740726951
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
There may be no more effective argument against environmental devastation than gorgeous photographs of adorable endangered animals-and this book is packed with them, accompanied by heartfelt entreaties about the looming extinction of dozens of species. Australian author Greive (The Blue Day Book; The Meaning of Life) writes an impassioned plea for environmental consciousness that glides between poetic ("you are the whole world, not just the space inside your clothes") and matter-of-fact ("It seems clear that our species is destined to be the cause of the sixth extinction"). The accompanying pictures by wildlife photographer Mitsuaki Iwago are captivating snapshots of disappearing animal worlds: a lion cub resting at sunset on the savanna, an elephant advancing across a plain while hundreds of white birds fly up before him. Greive and Iwago explore the interconnectedness and similarity of all life, but carefully avoid assigning human characteristics to the animals. And humans will reap what they sow, Grieve warns: "Only now are we learning that just as we made life unbearable of the many delicate species we have lost, so too we are slowly but surely making this planet unsuitable to sustain even our own existence." Grieve's simple, spare prose, which rarely measures more than a sentence or two per page, is sprinkled with facts and figures on humans' steady corruption of the earth. No reader will close the book unmoved by the beautiful, funny, and strange creatures in its pages. Amplifying this poignant call for action, Greive is donating all author proceeds from book sales to the Taronga Foundation, a wildlife conservation charity. Color photographs throughout. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Book Description
Everyone has heard about animals that are now extinct. But author Bradley Trevor Greive wants everyone to learn about animals that can be saved?and then to do something about it.In inspiring narrative and striking photographs of everything from humpback whales to pigmy possums to African spoonbills, Greive and wildlife photographer Mitsuaki Iwago spell out Earth?s diverse animal inventory. They highlight species that once were plentiful but now are scarce?some that are now sadly extinct?and point out specific dangers that other animals face.The authors also present a call to action: ?To preserve our home and the priceless creatures that dwell within it you need only see the world as it is and have a vision of how it could be.? Priceless is a must-have book for everyone interested in the environment, biodiversity, and in all life on Earth


About the Author
Author Bradley Trevor Greive's previous best-sellers have sold more than 5,000,000 copies in over 30 countries. In addition to writing engaging and entertaining books, BTG is an artist, cartoonist, furniture and toy designer, animation director, screenwriter, and ex-paratroop platoon leader. He lives in Sydney, Australia. Mitsuaki Iwago is one of the world's foremost wildlife photographers. He lives in Japan.




Priceless: The Vanishing Beauty of A Fragile Planet

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Everyone has heard about animals that are now extinct. But author Bradley Trevor Greive wants everyone to learn about animals that can be saved-and then to do something about it.

In inspiring narrative and striking photographs of everything from humpback whales to pigmy possums to African spoonbills, Grieve and wildlife photographer Mitsuaki Iwago spell out Earth's diverse animal inventory. They highlight species that once were plentiful but now are scarce-some that are now sadly extinct-and point out specific dangers that other animals face.

The authors also present a call to action: "To preserve our home and the priceless creatures that dwell within it you need only see the world as it is and have a vision of how it could be."

Priceless is a must-have book for everyone interested in the environment, biodiversity, and in all life on Earth.

FROM THE CRITICS

KLIATT - Gloria Levine Bryant

Priceless is a gem of a nature book about animals around the world threatened by extinction. Stunning photographs accompanied by equally compelling text-often only an incisive line or two-grace each beautifully designed page. This is a serious book, but there is plenty of visual humor-from the photo of the baby polar bear suspended mid-dive, to the kangaroo scratching its belly, to the saucer-eyed loris accompanied by the entreaty at the end, "and now it's up to you." The author manages to convey how unique all animals are in appearance and behavior-and how little we understand them. About halfway through the book, the tone shifts as we are reminded how destructive our ignorance of the natural world into which we continue to sprawl really is-and how important it is for us to find a balance within it. The power in the author's punches come from the straightforward barrage of simple facts he discharges. The book ends on an uplifting note, with a reminder that progress has been made in coming up with solutions to depletion of our resources. And through conservation acts and special breeding programs, we have brought several species back from the brink of extinction. Readers are given several specific tips on what they can do-further reinforcement of the message throughout the book that small changes really can make a big difference. Those who take pleasure in wildlife photography (and certainly budding nature photographers, themselves) will especially enjoy the book. English teachers will be delighted to find models of lyrical prose in an expository text, ideal for lessons on figurative language ("watch a woma python/ pour through the Central Australian Desert/like liquidbronze/leaving in its wake/an Arabic prayer for understanding/written in the sand.") And there is lovely humor in the descriptive passages that accompany photographs such as the one of the "tufted puffin with its shock of blonde hair and rococo beak." Priceless truly conveys a sense of humans' oneness with these creatures and our responsibility to them-"We live among exotic neighbors who/from the day they are born/will breathe the same air and look up at the same moon as you and, when they die, will lie buried in the same soil." Finally, for anyone researching endangered animals, the author provides a wealth of information about each animal featured in the book in a section at the end. The last few pages will bring both a smile and a tear to the most hardened eye. "There will be beauty" (photograph of a brilliant tropical bird), "there will be joy" (frolicking monkey), "there will be life on earth" (two-page spread of elephant surrounded by white birds)and (close-up on the appealing face of a somber-sweet panda)-"you will never have to live in a world without pandas." Having strategically placed the book inside the door of my classroom, this reviewer was able to determine that most people from age 10 on up have a predictable response: entranced by the baby Bornean orangutan featured on the cover, they stop to flip through the book-and then, mesmerized, end up reading it from cover to cover. KLIATT Codes: JSA*-Exceptional book, recommended for junior and senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2003, Andrews and McMeel, 147p. illus., Ages 12 to adult.

     



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