Snakes, Universes, and the Rest

The Loom gathered a bit of dust over the past couple weeks as I grappled with another round of deadlines for work that actually pays the mortgage. Life should now get relaxed enough for more blogging, I hope--starting this evening. And as the articles I've been working on come out in the next few weeks, I'll point you to the links--starting with my recent (brief but free) take
on the new fossil of snakes with legs for the New York Times. And speaking of evolutionary transitions, I'm also happy to bring news of a cool new project, called Kosmos: You Are Here. It's an e-book on the history of life and the universe. I got to know one of the co-authors, Steven Darksyde, when he contacted me for an interview with me he posted on DailyKos. Steven and his co-authors have put together a fast-paced, engaging look at what we know about the past, from the Big Bang to the Descent of Man. It's graced with pictures by Carl Buell, who illustrated my first book, At the Water's Edge and has continued to bring fossils to life (be sure to visit his blog). I provided an introduction in which I muse both about recent advances in science and in the way we communicate about it--including blogs and e-books.

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Some of you, dear readers, have probably wondered where I have been hiding these past few days. Well, besides being busy with teaching a conservation genetics course, I was also, unexpectedly, reading another book so I could publish the review here as soon as possible. Last Monday, Darksyde, co-…
My pal DarkSyde is one of the major contributors to a new science book put together by the DailyKos folks. The book is called Kosmos: You Are Here. The foreword is by the brilliant Carl Zimmer and the illustrations by the equally brilliant Carl Buell, the same team that did At the Water's Edge.…
My old pal DarkSyde has published an interview at Unscrewing the Inscrutable with Carl Buell, better known as Olduvai George. Buell, as I mentioned last week, is a brilliant illustrator who has done the illustrations for numerous books on science and evolution. Most notably, he did all the…
When I first met Hans Thewissen, he spending an afternoon standing on a table, pointing a camera at a fossil between his feet. He asked me to hold a clip light to get rid of some shadows. I felt like I was at a paleontological fashion shoot. Thewissen was taking pictures of bones from a whale that…

Well, I'm impressed. I posted a comment to the April 11th item saying that I was in need of a new post or two ... and about an hour later, this May 1 post popped up!!

Now that's influence!! :-)

By Scott Belyea (not verified) on 01 May 2006 #permalink