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An A to Z of insects through and outside science

By Claire Ainsworth

31 March 2010

INSECTOPEDIA is an eclectic collection of 26 essays and vignettes about insects and our relationship with them. As a mix of travel writing, cultural observation and history, this is a fine piece of work. Unfortunately, it has several shortcomings as a popular science book.

The essays are arranged alphabetically, encyclopedia-style. It gets off to a great start with “Air”, an awe-inspiring account of the thousands of airborne insects that drift overhead each day. However, things take a turn for the worse in chapter C with “Chernobyl”, a profile of entomological artist Cornelia Hesse-Honegger, who in her artwork documents deformity in…

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