Abominable Science!
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Daniel Loxton
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Preface by:
Michael Shermer
About this book
Author / Editor information
Michael Shermer (Ph.D. in the history of science from Claremont Graduate School) is a teaching fellow at Chapman University, founder of Skeptic Magazine, and a monthly columnist for Scientific American.He is the author of Why People Believe Weird Things, How We Believe, and The Science of Good and Evil, published by Henry Holt/Times Books.Daniel Loxton is the editor of Junior Skeptic and a staff writer for Skeptic, for which he specializes in critical scholarship regarding claims of legendary animals. Known for his even-handed approach—and for his lifelong personal love of monster mysteries—Loxton is one of the most widely respected skeptical critics of cryptozoology. He is the author and primary illustrator of Evolution: How We and All Living Things Came to Be (winner of the 2010 Lane Anderson Award as Canada's best science book for young readers) and of the photorealistic paleofiction storybooks Pterosaur Trouble and Ankylosaur Attack, the first two books in the series Tales of Prehistoric Life.
Donald R. Prothero is one of the leading scientists and authors working in paleontology and evolution. He is a former professor of geology at Occidental College and lecturer in geobiology at Caltech. He is presently a research associate in the Department of Vertebrate Paleontology at the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum and is the author of more than 30 books and 250 scientific papers published in leading scholarly journals. He received his Ph.D. from Columbia University and is a fellow of the Geological Society of America, the Paleontological Society, and the Linnean Society of London. In 1991, he received the award for "Outstanding Paleontologist Under the Age of 40," and was awarded the 2013 James Shea Award by the National Association of Geoscience Teachers for outstanding writing and editing in the geosciences.
Reviews
Robert Bishop:
An immaculately produced book rivaling.... Abominable Science! is entertaining, informative, and readable.
Axie Barclay:
[Abominable Science!] is fun and interesting, as well as thought-provoking and just a little bit strange.
Darren Naish:
Abominable Science! has to be regarded as one of the most important books ever written on cryptozoology, as well as one of the most meticulously researched.
Harriet Hall:
We still have a lot to learn from Bigfoot, and Loxton and Prothero are excellent teachers.
Abominable Science! takes its place upon the must-have list for cryptid researchers.... A definitive volume.... Abominable Science! is a sharp sword that cuts through the bogusness of popular monsterology.
Many good laughs... Loxton and Prothero have done a fine job of describing monsters that have an entertainment value for everyone...
The best and most useful book yet on the phenomenon of illusory 'cryptids' like Bigfoot and the Loch Ness monster.... Essential.
Glenn Dallas:
Abominable Science! is science writing at its best.
Any science and nature collection should consider this a lively and loving acquisition.
Justin Hickey:
An exhaustively-researched, color-illustrated volume that details the cultural forces (and often individual people) responsible for shaping these beasts in the public's imagination.
Kyle Hill:
Fantastically thorough.
Christopher Farnsworth:
[Abominable Science!] goes back to the foundations of the Bigfoot legend and picks off the fur piece by piece.
Margaret Wertheim:
They offer us a sharp analysis of the quest for unreal critters—cryptids, as they are called—and the people who pursue them, shining an arc light onto the hoaxes and faked photos, the made-up films, faux corpses, delusions, lies and plain bad science that plague the field.
Henry Gee:
[Abominable Science!] successfully reveals the influence of popular culture on what we think we see.
Elisa Neckar:
Skipping cryptozoology's usual sensationalism, [Abominable Science!] separates history and folklore from hoaxes and fakelore.
A good hard look at cryptozoology.... Loxton and Prothero lay bare the psychological roots of why such mythical creatures exist in our own minds.
Daniel Cressey:
[Abominable Science!] is a never less than rigorous examination of the evidence, and a cultural history of cryptozoology.
Iain Finlayson:
The authors, eminent and intrepid sceptics, seek evidence of fabulous big beasts and find nothing but fakes, folklore, pseudo-science and anecdote.
Margaret Wertheim:
[Loxton and Prothero] offer us a sharp analysis of the quest for unreal critters—cryptids, as they are called—and the people who pursue them, shining an arc light onto the hoaxes and faked photos, the made-up films, faux corpses, delusions, lies and plain bad science that plague the field.... [An] entertaining and thoroughly documented book.
Sharon Hill:
Groundbreaking.... A must-have. There is nothing else like it.
Highly recommended for readers looking for scientific but accessible evaluations of the existence of five notable cryptids that have captured our imaginations. Likely to be popular.
[Abominable Science!] is as valuable for its analysis of the hunted as it is for the light it shines on the still-hopeful hunters.
Niles Eldredge, American Museum of Natural History, author of Darwin: Discovering the Tree of Life:
Nearly everyone—scientist and layman alike—would love the Loch Ness monster and other 'cryptids' to be real. Daniel Loxton and Donald R. Prothero, in their riveting exploration of cryptozoology, readily admit that some species (such as the living coelacanth and even the mountain gorilla) remained hidden to human experience until relatively recently. Yet they insist on hard evidence, thus running counter to the preferences of those who prefer to believe. Abominable Science! is a well-told, engaging story of skepticism. Loxton and Prothero present a lucid and compelling case to counter the false claims of cryptozoology.
Darren Naish, National Oceanography Centre, University of Southampton:
Here, at last, is a scholarly, fully referenced work that presents a thoroughly reasonable, well-argued, skeptical perspective on some of the most iconic 'cryptids,' and it is fun to read and well illustrated to boot. Combining excellent and thorough research, ample references to the cryptozoological literature, and, most important, an appropriately level-headed, critical approach, Abominable Science! offers a novel, refreshing exploration of the world of cryptozoology.
from the foreword by Michael Shermer, author of The Believing Brain: From Ghosts and Gods to Politics and Conspiracies:
Loxton and Prothero have written what may well be the most important work to date on cryptozoology, taking its rightful place in the annals of skeptical literature in particular and scientific literature in general. Abominable Science! is the defining work on cryptozoology of our generation.
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