Reviews
This book, which is well illustrated with photos, drawings and maps, will answer the questions about ferns you would never think to ask., "The author has presented his topics with a fresh approach, so that even seasoned fern-lovers will see events from new vantage points." --Barbara Joe Hoshizaki, Pacific Horticulture , Spring 2005, It is amazing that a book so rich in biological data can be such a good read! Robbin Moran...is to be congratulated on another superlative job!, Robin Moran writes in such an easy and interesting style, taking the reader from observations and personal reminiscences into facts and back again with such ease that science becomes part of the story and the story becomes part of the scientific understanding., This book is not a Field Guide to ferns, but rather a series of fascinating scientific tales, written in a style that educates the lay person as well as the scientific community., I really enjoyed this book and would recommend that anyone with an interest in plants read it. (Moran's) interest and passion for the scientific study of pteridophytes comes out as he conveys vast knowledge of this fascinating group of plants., A great book ... Oliver Sacks, the author of the book's forward, compares Moran's writing to that of Stephen Jay Gould. Having read some of Gould's work, I agree with his assessment. If you like Gould, you will like this book. If you don't like Gould, you will still like A Natural History of Ferns. And now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to get back to reading Moran's book., These masterfully written tales and the solid science behind them make this a terrific book for fern enthusiasts or anyone interested in our natural world., This book is like nothing else on the subject. First, it's not a field guide. . . . Secondly, it's fun to read., In this volume [Moran] takes his reader on a delightful pteridological journey which includes time travel back to remote geological ages, long distance travel to various points, especially to his beloved South America, and exploration in the library and laboratory., Most gardeners suspect that there is something very complex about ferns, but few of us have the chance to delve into their mysteries. Robbin Moran's book makes their magic accessible in all its strange detail., An intelligent introduction to ferns for the enjoyment of both the amateur enthusiast and the professional pteridologist., A Natural History of Ferns is not an encyclopedia or a systematic presentation of fern genera and species. It is a collection of engaging essays by Moran, curator of ferns at the New York Botanical Garden. He has certainly changed the way I look at this most ancient flower-free plant family., I learned in botany classes that ferns reproduce by spores, but I never really understood what makes a spore so different from a seed until I read A Natural History of Ferns., I could not find a dull sentence or a wasted word in Robbin Moran's A Natural History of Ferns. Read this excellent book and you will be left in no doubt that the world's 14,000 ferns, horsetails, quillworts and clubmosses are dynamic, important and interesting modern plants with much to teach us., Here is an author who plainly delights in his subject and one needn't be a fern aficionado to share his enthusiasm., If...your social life finds you surrounded by legions of people with a fascination for ferns, you will definitely want to quote tidbits from A Natural History of Ferns., The structure of the book, a series of essays, allows Mr. Moran to make full use of his ability to render understandable the complexities of nature and to draw in the reader as a storyteller does., The writing is such that even a beginner can come to understand this great green family of plants.He has certainly changed the way I look at this most ancient, flower-free plant family., The author has presented his topics with a fresh approach, so that even seasoned fern-lovers will see events from new vantage points., Robbin Morran's captivating style made this collection an excellent read and an easy introduction to various aspects of pteridophytes. However, it is also a scholarly work, and is an excellent source of information on ferns and their natural history., A joy to read, this book features science writing that goes beyond description, revealing patterns and mechanisms--the essence of natural history.