Last Chance to See-Douglas Adams & Mark Carwardine
Travel/Nature
Last Chance to See
Douglas Adams/Mark Carwardine
Every species of living organism is a uniquely crafted specimen of
nature. Be it a bacteria thriving on human waste, wood pecker with beak that
drills holes in hard bark of trees in search of insects lurking beneath, Sphinx
Moths with ten-inch long proboscis to suck nectar from flowers with nectary
situated in its depths or an Influenza virus that rapidly changes its
genome to evade host defence mechanisms.
Each is a work of art created over millions of years to deftly exploit the
niche of nature it inhabits. The most wonderful aspect of this process of creation
of millions of species on earth is the blind creator of these marvels. The
creator is a simple law of nature, Evolution by Natural Selection,
breathtakingly bewitching in its stark simplicity and mind-jarring in its
unfathomably huge powers. It works relentlessly, untiringly, blindly, without
forethought, and without an objective. Species go extinct when environment
changes, either gradually or cataclysmically, and newer species better adapted
for the new environment replace them. Since birth of a species is the
culmination of blind forces of nature without any planning whatsoever, a
species once extinct can never be resurrected. Millions of species have died
and millions have taken their place, since life began on earth about four billion
years ago. But arrival of a new species on earth, the thinking, planning,
scheming, bipedal ape, added a sinister twist to this natural tale of birth and
death. This new species of big ape was capable of forethought due to its
greatly ballooned brain and it could alter the environment rapidly for its own
gain. Many creatures of earth had no apparatus to adapt to the dangers posed by
this rapidly changing environment. They depended on Natural Selection to change
them, a process that is uninspiringly slow. These species then went extinct at
an alarming rate. This thinking ape, capable of forethought, willingly or
ignorantly abandoned this most unique of its features, as it went about killing
many species of animals, thoughtlessly, just for fun.
This book, by Adams and Carwardine, is a forceful and poignant
reminder of the speed at which species ae dying out on earth due to the rapid
change in environment bought about by human beings. Douglas Adams, a hugely
popular science-fiction writer and Mark Carwardine, a zoologist, teamed up, as
they travelled to places on various continents to avail the Last Chance to See
the vanishing species. They travelled to Madagascar to view Nocturnal Lemur,
the Aye-Aye; to Combodia for the Komodo Dragon; to Zaire for Mountain Gorillas;
to New Zealand for the flightless parrot Kakapo, and to many more such stunning
places in search of exquisite animals.
I have not read many popular Authors. These are writers of such solid
fame and universal liking, that to admit ignorance of their books in literate
public, is subjecting yourself to scathing mockery. Douglas Adam is one such
author and this is his first book that I read. I had my reason to eschew him
all these years. I do not like science fiction. But as I finished this one, I
regretted having avoided his books for so long. He is a fabulous writer. His
humour is unparalleled, not unlike Bill Bryson. Bryson and Adams have a similar
vein of wit, a mind-ripping, tummy-jarring humour, in most innocuous of saturations
that is laced with stark irreverence. This being a travel book too, brings it
closer to Bryson’s forte. Adams has a unique capability to present scientific
facts in singularly witty phrases, without disturbing the scientific explanations.
Book is replete with such terrific snippets of evolutionary science. Adams’
prose is highly readable, and has an elegance that also sates the hunger for
refined writing. Even the most commonplace circumstances of their travel stand
out because of Adams’ humorous writing. There is not a dragging paragraph in
the whole book and when the last page pops-up unannounced, one irresistibly
craves for more.
I now intend to read Adams’ Histchhiker’s Guide to Galaxy soon
I appreciate "THGTG" by Douglas Adams. It is one of the best series I have read. Now after reading your reviews about "Last Chance to See" sparks a level of curiosity about how a great fiction writer has told the stories of the real zoology world. I am definitely ordering this book now
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