The Science Factory Spring 2021 Rights List

Page 31

Spring Rights List 2021

RECENTLY PUBLISHED

THE AGE OF WOOD Mankind’s Most Useful Material and the Construction of Civilization ROLAND ENNOS Precise, almost mesmerizing detail – NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW A stunning book… Ennos’s knowledge of all things arboreal is vast and intricate… nothing less than a complete reinterpretation of human history and prehistory… written with enormous verve and pinpoint clarity… No review can match the richness of Ennos’s book… I felt like cheering – John Carey, SUNDAY TIMES

How did we, the descendants of small arboreal primates, manage to stand on our own two feet, become top predators and spread about the world? How did we transform the world’s vegetation and build large settlements, develop civilizations and produce a globalized economy? In THE AGE OF WOOD, Roland Ennos shows that the key to our success has been our relationship with a material usually whitewashed from world histories: wood. Drawing together recent research and reinterpreting our existing knowledge in fields as wide-ranging as primatology, anthropology, archaeology, history, architecture, engineering and carpentry, he charts for the first time how our ability to exploit wood’s unique properties has shaped our bodies and minds, societies and lives. Our binocular vision, upright stance and grasping hands, our intelligence and empathy, the ability to make and use tools, and even to walk on two legs – all evolved to help our ancestors live among the narrow wooden branches of the rainforest canopy. Wood was also vital to our success as huntergatherers: we burnt wood to keep warm, protect ourselves and cook our food, and carved it to make increasingly sophisticated weapons. Novel woodworking tools enabled us to clear forests, plough the land and build the first houses, boats and wheels. And during historical times wood shaped our culture and history through architecture, shipbuilding and industrialization, responsible for the rise and fall of empires and the emergence of the modern world. Wood is still among the world’s most important structural materials and fuels, and in the past 150 years we have learnt to transform it into a whole new range of wood products including paper, plywood and laminates. So great is the demand for these energy-intensive materials that their use is starting to degrade the global environment. At the same time, by treating trees as commodities, we have paradoxically begun to devalue wood and turn our back on it. We need, Ennos argues, to relearn what we have forgotten about trees and traditional woodworking practices. For our own welfare and for the benefit of the planet we must return to more traditional ways of growing and using trees locally. We must return to the Wood Age. ROLAND ENNOS is a visiting professor of biological sciences at the University of Hull. An expert on the mechanics of wood and the design of trees, he has investigated how our fingers are modified for gripping, how apes move about and make their nests in the forest canopy, how early humans designed better axes to cut down trees and how we have managed and altered forests. In addition to over 120 scientific publications, he has written a popular book on trees for London’s Natural History Museum and several pieces for Physics World and the Conversation (including one on keeping your house warm which has been read one-and-a-half million times). Agent: Peter Tallack Publisher: Scribner (US)/William Collins (UK) – UK title, THE WOOD AGE Publication: 1 December 2020/18 February 2021 Length: 336 pages All rights available excluding UK & Commonwealth (William Collins), US & Canada (Scribner), China (United Sky (Beijing) New Media), Japan (NHK), Korea (Forest Book Publishing Co.)

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by Keith MartinCryptography

2min
page 37

by Massimo PigliucciA Field Guide to a Happy Life How to Make a Vaccine by John Rhodes 38

5min
pages 39-46

by Naohiro MatsumuraShikake

2min
page 38

RECENT WORLD RIGHTS DEALS

1min
page 47

by Emily LevesqueThe Last Stargazers

2min
page 36

by Kate GreeneOnce Upon a Time I Lived On Mars

2min
page 33

by Mark HumphriesThe Spike

5min
pages 34-35

by Roland EnnosThe Age of Wood

3min
page 31

by Frank FarandaThe Fear Paradox

2min
page 32

by Eric BergerLiftoff

2min
page 30

by Gillian ‘Gus’ AndrewsKeep Calm and Log On

2min
page 29

by Leah ZaniStrike Patterns

2min
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by Roberto TrottaA World Without Stars

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by Govert SchillingThe Elephant in the Universe

5min
pages 25-26

by Angela SainiThe Patriarchs

2min
page 24

by Vann R. Newkirk IIChildren of the Flood

1min
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by Alison LiWondrous Transformations

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by Regan PenalunaHow to Think Like a Woman

2min
page 22

by Massimo PigliucciUntitled Moral Biography of Socrates and Alcibiades

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by Ian KeableThe Century of Deception

2min
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by Fiona FoxHeadline Science

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pages 16-18

by Skye C. ClearyHow To Be Authentic

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by Rachel FeltmanSex

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page 15

by Gregory ForthBetween Ape and Human

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pages 6-8

by Elizabeth KeatingHow to Interview Your Family

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by Aynne KokasTrafficking Data

2min
page 10

by Adam BeckerUntitled on Silicon Valley

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pages 12-13

by Azeem AzharExponential

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page 11

by Athena AktipisHijacked

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pages 3-5
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