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The complete Open Letters Monthly Archive.

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April 24, 2015

Book Review: Cuckoo: Cheating by Nature

April 24, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

Cuckoos use other species of birds to raise the young they abandon, and they've been doing it for thousands of years without getting arrested. An absorbing new book isn't precisely rooting for them, but still ...

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April 24, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
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April 2015, natural history
February 12, 2015

Book Review: The Cultural Lives of Whales and Dolphins

February 12, 2015/ Steve Donoghue

In the vastness of the world's oceans, some mammals have evolved brains and language ... and culture? A fascinating new book looks at the inner lives of whales and dolphins

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February 12, 2015/ Steve Donoghue/
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February 2015, natural history
November 03, 2014

Book Review: Bee Time

November 03, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

An enjoyable new book draws some unexpected parallels between human society and the world of bees

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November 03, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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natural history, November 2014
September 21, 2014

Book Review: Welcome to Subirdia

September 21, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

In cities and suburbs all over the developed world, dozens of species of birds are making sometimes uneasy adaptations to the yards and neighborhoods and suburbs of human habitations - this is "subirdia," and a spirited new book takes readers on a tour of it

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September 21, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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Birds, natural history, September 2014
September 20, 2014

Book Review: Relicts of a Beautiful Sea

September 20, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A paradox lies at the heart of Christopher Norment's eloquent new book: the sea life of Death Valley

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September 20, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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natural history, September 2014
September 07, 2014

Book Review: The Birds of Pandemonium

September 07, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

Spurred by a chance encounter with a wounded bird, Michele Raffin steadily grew her hobby into one of the world's most successful sanctuaries for rare and threatened birds in need of rehabilitation.

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September 07, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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Birds, natural history, September 2014
August 22, 2014

Book Review: A Message from Martha

August 22, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

2014 marks the sad centenary of the extinction of the passenger pigeon, whose vast flocks had once darkened the skies of a young America; a new book sounds out the messages of that melancholy anniversary

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August 22, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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August 2014, natural history
July 26, 2014

Book Review: The Cougar

July 26, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A great new book of natural history focuses on the history, ecology, and behavior of the mountain lion, the fourth largest cat on the planet

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July 26, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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July 2014, natural history
May 21, 2014

Book Review: Bumble Bees of North America

May 21, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

A lavishly-illustrated guide book to the bumble bees of North America, in all their busy glory

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May 21, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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May 2014, natural history
May 03, 2014

Book Review: The Homing Instinct

May 03, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

Birds, turtles, bees, fish, whales ... vast armies of living things traverse vast swatches of distance every year in their migrations. But how do they find their way? And WHY do they find their way? Bernd Heinrich's new book explores the homing instinct.

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May 03, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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May 2014, natural history
April 23, 2014

Book Review: Hummingbirds

April 23, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

The world's smallest and busiest birds are the subject of a pretty new book

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April 23, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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April 2014, Birds, natural history, nature
April 11, 2014

Book Review: The Galapagos

April 11, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

The beautiful Galapagos islands - home to finches, tortoises, and active magma - are the subject of a delightful new study

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April 11, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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April 2014, natural history
April 09, 2014

Book Review: The Double-Crested Cormorant

April 09, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

That sleek and elegant diving-bird, the double-crested cormorant, faces deep-seated prejudices - and disastrous legal measures - in North America, its ancestral home

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April 09, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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April 2014, natural history
March 25, 2014

Book Review: The Sixth Extinction

March 25, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

Will the latest age of man - dubbed the Anthropocene - be the last? A new book looks at the tremendous toll the human race has taken on its home planet

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March 25, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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March 2014, natural history
March 05, 2014

Book Review: An Explorer's Notebook

March 05, 2014/ Steve Donoghue

An exuberant collection of essays and reviews by trailblazing natural historian Tim Flannery

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March 05, 2014/ Steve Donoghue/
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March 2014, natural history
October 30, 2013

Book Review: Octopus!

October 30, 2013/ Steve Donoghue

The strangest, most alien creatures on the Earth have three hearts and big, unfathomable brains - and, famously, eight arms. It's the sprawling family of octopus species, and they get a soup-to-nuts examination in Katherine Harmon Courage's new book

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October 30, 2013/ Steve Donoghue/
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natural history, nature, October 2013
August 22, 2013

Book Review: Planet Without Apes

August 22, 2013/ Steve Donoghue

More than at any point in their collective history, mankind's great ape cousins face the threat of total extinction. A passionate new book outlines all the threats - and clings to some hope

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August 22, 2013/ Steve Donoghue/
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August 2013, natural history, nature
August 19, 2013

In Paperback: Life in a Shell

August 19, 2013/ Steve Donoghue

A new paperback explores the mysteries of turtles

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August 19, 2013/ Steve Donoghue/
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August 2013, natural history, nature
June 16, 2013

Book Review: Narwhals

June 16, 2013/ Open Letters Monthly

There's much more to the narwhal than its legendary corkscrew horn; a new book delves into their fascinating natural history - and the looming threat they face from global warming.

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June 16, 2013/ Open Letters Monthly/
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June 2013, natural history
May 02, 2013

Book Review: Alexander Wilson, the Scot Who Founded American Ornithology

May 02, 2013/ Steve Donoghue

He was a young immigrant from Scotland who was inspired by one great man and inspired another, but in between, Alexander Wilson did the pioneering work of creating the American discipline of bird-study. A wonderful new book re-examines his legacy

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May 02, 2013/ Steve Donoghue/
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Birds, May 2013, natural history, nature
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