Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different
Priceless: The Vanishing Beauty of a Fragile Planet Paperback - 2003
by Bradley Trevor Greive/ Mitsuaki Iwago
- New
- Paperback
Description
New
NZ$63.18
NZ$21.06
Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 14 to 21 days
More Shipping Options
Standard delivery: 14 to 21 days
Ships from Revaluation Books (Devon, United Kingdom)
Details
- Title Priceless: The Vanishing Beauty of a Fragile Planet
- Author Bradley Trevor Greive/ Mitsuaki Iwago
- Binding Paperback
- Edition First Printing
- Condition New
- Pages 160
- Volumes 1
- Language ENG
- Publisher Andrews McMeel Pub, Kansas City, MO
- Date 2003
- Illustrated Yes
- Features Illustrated
- Bookseller's Inventory # 1-0740726951
- ISBN 9780740726958 / 0740726951
- Weight 1.45 lbs (0.66 kg)
- Dimensions 9.4 x 10 x 0.5 in (23.88 x 25.40 x 1.27 cm)
-
Themes
- Topical: Ecology
- Library of Congress subjects Endangered species
- Library of Congress Catalog Number 2002066607
- Dewey Decimal Code 591.68
About Revaluation Books Devon, United Kingdom
Biblio member since 2020
General bookseller of both fiction and non-fiction.
Summary
Mitsuaki Iwago's gorgeous photographs of adorable endangered animals accompanied by Bradley Trevor Greive's impassioned plea for environmental consciousness and sprinkled with facts and figures on humans' steady corruption of the earth in Priceless.
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 Bradley Trevor Greive 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.
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 Bradley Trevor Greive 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.
From the publisher
First line
"In the end we will conserve only what we love and we will love only what we understand"
Media reviews
Citations
- Kliatt, 01/01/2004, Page 36
- Library Journal, 10/15/2003, Page 0