The Wonder of Flight. The Science of Evolution. From both, Richard
Dawkins weaves a fascinating and beautifully illustrated account of how
nature and humans have learned to overcome the pull of gravity and take
to the skies.
Do you sometimes dream you can fly like a bird? Gliding effortlessly
above the treetops, soaring and swooping, playing and dodging through
the third dimension. Computer games, virtual reality headsets, and some
drugs can lift our imagination and fly us through fabled, magical
spaces. But it's not the real thing. No wonder some of the past's
greatest minds, including Leonardo da Vinci's, have yearned for flying
machines and struggled to design them.
Flights of Fancy is a book about flying - all the different ways of
defying gravity that have been discovered by humans over the centuries
and by other animals over the millions of years, from the mythical
Icarus, to the sadly extinct but magnificent bird Argentavis
magnificens, to the Wright Flyer and the 747. But it also means flights
of digression into more general ideas and principles that take off from
a discussion about actual flight.
Fascinating and elegantly written, this is a unique collaboration
between one of the world's leading zoologists and a talented artist, and
perfect for enquiring teenage minds.