The Science Factory Autumn 2021 Rights List

Page 19

Autumn Rights List 2021

FORTHCOMING TITLES

WHY WE WENT EXTINCT An Illustrated Encyclopaedia of the Species that Just Didn’t Make It TADAAKI IMAIZUMI & TAKASHI MARUYAMA

Since life first arose on Earth, 99.9 per cent of all species that have ever lived have gone extinct. If your species happens to be alive right now – never mind just you specifically! – you are already among the very lucky. WHY WE WENT EXTINCT is an illustrated encyclopaedia of the animals that weren’t as lucky, that wound up on Darwin’s bad side through poor physical traits or unfortunate timing, or simply had the massive misfortune to run up against the rise of human civilization. Every spread in the book consists of an illustration of the departed animal in question, various scientific facts about it (era, size, habitat, diet and so on) and a monologue from the animal itself about why it went extinct. Readers learn about Platybelodon, an elephant ancestor whose jaw was too heavy to survive; Cameroceras, a cephalopod whose body was too straight to survive; the Laughing Owl, who went extinct because it laughed too loud; and a whole host of other mammals, reptiles, birds, amphibians and fish that just didn’t make it. These are sad stories, of course, but the endearing illustrations and charming voices of the animals bring them back to life, if only briefly, to teach readers about their lives and times, and to give us all a deeper appreciation of life on Earth (especially as we face human-caused climate change, a driver of extinction that the book addresses in full as well). And thankfully, there is a final chapter – ‘You Would Think We’re Extinct, But We’re Not!’ – that highlights some of the unexpected survival stories such as the pygmy hippopotamus, which by all accounts doesn’t seem well-equipped by Darwinian standards but has basically survived by hiding in the forest. WHY WE WENT EXTINCT has become a huge phenomenon in Japan since it was first published in 2018, selling well over half a million copies. And with the recent wave of interest in palaeontology seen in books such as Steve Brusatte’s The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs, along with the proven appeal of whimsically illustrated nonfiction in the vein of Rachel Ignotofsky’s The Wondrous Workings of Planet Earth, WHY WE WENT EXTINCT is poised for breakout success around the globe. TADAAKI IMAIZUMI graduated from Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, and studied mammal taxonomy and ecology at the National Science Museum of Japan. He participated in the Ministry of Education’s International Biological Project and the Ministry of Environment’s ecological survey of the Iriomote wildcat. After working as an animal-science educator at Ueno Zoo in Tokyo, he is now councillor at the Tokyo Zoo Association. He likes cheetahs and leopards because they are independent, quiet, and are strict parents. TAKASHI MARUYAMA is a zoology writer and creator of illustrated encyclopaedias. After working for Nature Pro Editorial Office, he engaged in the research of hyraxes in the Negev desert in Israel. His favourite animal is the aardvark because it is the only remaining living species of the order Tubulidentata. Agent: Jeff Shreve Publisher: Quill Tree (HarperCollins) Publication: Spring 2022 Status: Proposal and sample spreads (in English); full Japanese page proofs. Length: 350 pages All rights available excluding US & Canada (Quill Tree) – Japan, China and rest of East Asia reserved to the Japanese publisher (Diamond)

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Articles inside

Spike by Jeremy Farrar & Anjana Ahuja

2min
page 36

The Century of Deception by Ian Keable

2min
page 38

How to Make a Vaccine by John Rhodes

3min
pages 39-45

The Spike by Mark Humphries

2min
page 37

RECENT WORLD RIGHTS DEALS

1min
page 46

Reimagining Time by Tanya Bub & Jeffrey Bub

2min
page 35

Liftoff by Eric Berger

2min
page 34

The Invention of Tomorrow by Thomas Suddendorf, Jon Redshaw & Adam Bulley

2min
page 30

Exponential by Azeem Azhar

2min
page 33

The Patriarchs by Angela Saini

2min
page 28

A World Without Stars by Roberto Trotta

2min
page 31

The Elephant in the Universe by Govert Schilling

2min
page 29

Strike Patterns by Leah Zani

2min
page 32

What Every Woman Needs to Know About Her Gut by Barbara Ryan & Elaine McGowan

2min
page 27

Untitled on Socrates and Alcibiades by Massimo Pigliucci

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page 26

Trafficking Data by Aynne Kokas

1min
page 22

An Epidemiologist Reads the News by Cecile Janssens

3min
page 20

How to Think Like a Woman by Regan Penaluna

2min
page 25

Wondrous Transformations by Alison Li

2min
page 23

Why We Went Extinct by Tadaaki Imaizumi & Takashi Maruyama

2min
page 19

How to Interview Your Family by Elizabeth Keating

1min
page 21

Children of the Flood by Vann R. Newkirk II

1min
page 24

How To Be Authentic by Skye C. Cleary

2min
page 13

For the Culture by Marcus Collins

2min
page 14

Virtual You by Peter Coveney & Roger Highfield

2min
page 18

Untitled on Silicon Valley by Adam Becker

1min
page 12

Been There, Done That by Rachel Feltman

2min
page 15

Beyond the Hype by Fiona Fox

2min
page 17

Hijacked by Athena Aktipis

2min
page 11

Between Ape and Human by Gregory Forth

2min
page 16

How the Victorians Took Us to the Moon

2min
page 10

Spin by Roland Ennos

2min
page 6

Engineers of Human Souls by Simon Ings

2min
page 7

Borderline by Alexander Kriss

2min
page 9

Dead Minds by Jesse Bering

2min
page 4

Touchdown by Eric Berger

2min
page 3

The Beauty of Falling Claudia de Rham

2min
page 5

Six Things by Stephen Joseph

2min
page 8
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