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An Immense World

How Animal Senses Reveal the Hidden Realms Around Us

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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

'Wonderful, mind-broadening... a journey to alternative realities as extraordinary as any you'll find in science fiction' - The Times, Book of the Week

Humans have three or four colour-detecting cones in their retinas. Mantis shrimp have 16. In fact, their eyes seem to have more in common with satellite technology than with biological vision as we currently understand it. They have evolved to track movement with an acuity no other species can match by processing raw information; they may not 'see', in the human sense, at all.

Marine molluscs called chitons have eyes which are made of stone. Scorpions appear to see with their entire bodies. It isn't only vision that differs from species to species - some animals also have senses we lack entirely. Knifefish navigate by electrical charge.

An Immense World will take us on an insider's tour of the natural world by describing the biology, physics and chemistry animals use to perceive it. We may lack some of their senses, but our own super-sense lies in our ability to understand theirs. And in the face of the largest extinction event since the meteor that killed the dinosaurs, our only hope of saving other species is bound up with our ability to see what they see, and feel what they feel.

© Ed Yong 2022 (P) Penguin Audio 2022

Animals Biological Sciences Biology Ecology Nature & Ecology Outdoors & Nature Science Inspiring Thought-Provoking

Critic reviews

Standing out even during a recent golden age of nature writing, Ed Yong dazzles with a deeply considered exploration of the many modes of sensory perception that life has evolved to navigate the world, written with exhilarating freshness
[A] wondrous, lustrous, captivating book: Ed Yong's An Immense World... left me awed and stunned - and revolted by humanity's destructive pride and planetary abuse
Full of extraordinary discoveries... an encyclopaedic, rigorously researched journey... recasts the world in breath-taking, bewildering immensity
A hymn to the wonders of evolution... fascinating
Yong succeeds in bringing a sense of grandeur to life on every scale
Not just a study of the myriad wonders of the natural world - though wondrous they are - but also a panoramic, complex portrait of the sensory capacities that underpin a multitude of life. ... In uncovering all this, Yong also shows why we should give more thought to our place in the world.
An Immense World is an exploration of the ways in which our fellow creatures navigate, understand and interact with one another and their environment through senses. ... The result is so mind-boggling, it's tempting to say 'forget looking in deep space for astonishment'. But let's not do that. Let's continue searching there while also paying better attention to the miracles right under our noses. Yong's marvellous book shows us how.
This book lifts the shroud on previously invisible dimensions of the world itself
A magic well of surprising, enlightening discoveries about the sensory worlds of other species... A brilliant book, marvellous and mesmerizing (Jennifer Ackerman, author of The Genius of Birds)
A stunning achievement - steeped in science but suffused with magic (Siddhartha Mukherjee, author The Emperor of All Maladies)
All stars
Most relevant
A fascinating book which has so much intriguing information in it. I had very little detailed knowledge of the wide range of ways different animals and insects observe the world around them, and what I learned has left me wanting to know more.

Loved this book!

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The author does an excellent job of describing the sensory worlds of other animals. It’s the closest answer yet to ‘what is it like to be a bat’

A glimpse into other worlds

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Absolutely fascinating book on how animals perceive the world. Extremely informative, well written and well read. I will definitely be listening to this again multiple times in the future.

Fantastic

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Ed Yong has been one of my favourite science writers for a long time, such a gifted communicator and stylish, thoughtful writer. Turns out he’s a great reader as well! Thoroughly enjoyed this fascinating book and would call it ‘eye-opening’ but that seems a feeble metaphor in the context of the astonishing variety of sensory umwelts Yong introduces us to. After hearing him speak about the book on a podcast in 2022 the book had been on my reading list and must say hearing it read, and by Yong, added something extra and am glad I opted for audio rather than print (or should I say, the sense of sound over sight).

Beautiful, strange and poignant

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Wonderful book all about the science of animal senses which makes you ask deep philosophical questions about our planet.

This book will change your perception of the world

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