The Nature of Life and Death: Every Body Leaves a Trace

Author:   Patricia Wiltshire
Publisher:   Penguin Putnam Inc
ISBN:  

9780525542223


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   01 September 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Our Price $47.52 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

The Nature of Life and Death: Every Body Leaves a Trace


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Patricia Wiltshire
Publisher:   Penguin Putnam Inc
Imprint:   G P Putnam's Sons
Dimensions:   Width: 13.90cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 20.90cm
Weight:   0.244kg
ISBN:  

9780525542223


ISBN 10:   0525542221
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   01 September 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A New York Times Book Review New & Noteworthy Pick One of Science News' Favorite Science Books of the 2019 The Nature of Life and Death is one of those extraordinary books that will appeal to almost everyone. If you're a Mary Roach fan, fascinated by the macabre and grotesque, you'll get to follow Wiltshire into mortuaries and watch her pick apart cadavers. If you're a Lab Girl fan, inspired by stories of women blazing new trails in science, that's Wiltshire's entire career. If you're a gardener, you will love knowing how often botany has saved the day. And if you're a crime fiction fan--well, you've found your new favorite sleuth. --The Washington Post Crabby, brilliant and brittle, but also quite tender when it comes to the loss and pain of grieving families, Ms. Wiltshire seems to come straight out of a British detective series. She's an eccentric who, after proving guilt in an Albanian gang murder, goes home, puts on her sweat pants, makes herself a dinner of beans and toast and cuddles with her cat. With a lead character like this, the science and crimes, while highly readable, are mainly stages and props for this engaging and enlightening one-woman show. --The Wall Street Journal A British forensic ecologist, Wiltshire studies the natural world for clues to criminal activity: part Discovery Channel, part C.S.I. Her autobiography will change the way you view your environment. --The New York Times Book Review Weaving science writing with true crime stories, The Nature of Life and Death is a must-read for true crime fans who feel burned out on the genre. --Bustle Enjoy this book. It will leave its trace on you. --Science Magazine Fascinating through and through, the tales Wiltshire shares are worthy of any true-crime novel or TV drama such as NCIS. --Science News Wiltshire writes like the scientist she is...the subject matter is fascinating, and Wiltshire makes a good case for curiousity as she steps through the process of tracking details and solving mysteries. --Outside Magazine How this mild-mannered but fiercely dedicated academician came to muck around in woodlands, bogs, and parks searching for clues that would otherwise escape the less botanically astute makes for a fiendishly good memoir. Though many scenes are not for the fainthearted, Wiltshire's truthful and candid attitude provides a stellar glimpse into this fascinating field of criminal investigation. --Booklist [The Nature of Life and Death] is reminiscent at times of Mary Roach's Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers and also the television show Bones....Fascinating for readers who enjoy science, including ecology and botany, and who aren't too squeamish. --Library Journal An autobiography well supplied with personal opinions along with entertaining if sometimes squirm-inducing triumps of criminal investigation. --Kirkus Reviews What is forensice ecology? Wiltshire...answers that question in her gracefully written first book for a general audience....CSI fans will be enthralled. --Publishers Weekly Worthy of any true-crime novel or TV show, this type of clue hunting can be very integral in the field of forensics. --Medical Daily This is a deep book, in some respects, but it's also engaging and delightfully nerdy. No true crime fan should be without it. Science lovers will relish it. The Nature of Life and Death should not be left behind. -- Bookworm Sez The Nature of Life and Death draws the reader into the invisible world of a forensic ecologist who utilizes state-of-the-art science to solve grisly crimes that would have otherwise been unsolvable. Fans of true crime such as CSI and Forensic Files will be in for a treat as Pat gives you a personal glimpse into her world and philosophy of life. --Steffanie Strathdee, PhD, and Thomas Patterson, PhD, coauthors of The Perfect Predator: A Scientist's Race to Save Her Husband from a Deadly Superbug Capturing and studying the almost-invisible clues that nature leaves on victim and suspect alike, Wiltshire uses her deep knowledge of botany and palynology to recreate crime scenes and establish the guilt--and sometimes innocence--of the accused. The Nature of Life and Death is a compelling mystery, an ode to the natural world, and an engrossing account of a female scientist whose passion, expertise, and deep curiousity created an entirely new branch of crime solving. --Cat Warren, author of the New York Times bestseller What the Dog Knows: Scent, Science, and the Amazing Ways Dogs Perceive the World


"A New York Times Book Review New & Noteworthy Pick One of Science News' Favorite Science Books of the 2019  ""The Nature of Life and Death is one of those extraordinary books that will appeal to almost everyone. If you're a Mary Roach fan, fascinated by the macabre and grotesque, you'll get to follow Wiltshire into mortuaries and watch her pick apart cadavers. If you're a Lab Girl fan, inspired by stories of women blazing new trails in science, that's Wiltshire's entire career. If you're a gardener, you will love knowing how often botany has saved the day. And if you're a crime fiction fan—well, you've found your new favorite sleuth."" —The Washington Post  ""Crabby, brilliant and brittle, but also quite tender when it comes to the loss and pain of grieving families, Ms. Wiltshire seems to come straight out of a British detective series. She's an eccentric who, after proving guilt in an Albanian gang murder, goes home, puts on her sweat pants, makes herself a dinner of beans and toast and cuddles with her cat. With a lead character like this, the science and crimes, while highly readable, are mainly stages and props for this engaging and enlightening one-woman show."" —The Wall Street Journal  “A British forensic ecologist, Wiltshire studies the natural world for clues to criminal activity: part Discovery Channel, part “C.S.I.” Her autobiography will change the way you view your environment.”—The New York Times Book Review ""Weaving science writing with true crime stories, The Nature of Life and Death is a must-read for true crime fans who feel burned out on the genre."" —Bustle  ""Enjoy this book. It will leave its trace on you."" —Science Magazine  ""Fascinating through and through, the tales Wiltshire shares are worthy of any true-crime novel or TV drama such as NCIS."" —Science News ""Wiltshire writes like the scientist she is...the subject matter is fascinating, and Wiltshire makes a good case for curiousity as she steps through the process of tracking details and solving mysteries."" —Outside Magazine  ""How this mild-mannered but fiercely dedicated academician came to muck around in woodlands, bogs, and parks searching for clues that would otherwise escape the less botanically astute makes for a fiendishly good memoir. Though many scenes are not for the fainthearted, Wiltshire's truthful and candid attitude provides a stellar glimpse into this fascinating field of criminal investigation."" —Booklist  “[The Nature of Life and Death] is reminiscent at times of Mary Roach’s Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers and also the television show Bones….Fascinating for readers who enjoy science, including ecology and botany, and who aren’t too squeamish.” —Library Journal “An autobiography well supplied with personal opinions along with entertaining if sometimes squirm-inducing triumps of criminal investigation.” —Kirkus Reviews ""What is forensice ecology? Wiltshire...answers that question in her gracefully written first book for a general audience....CSI fans will be enthralled."" —Publishers Weekly  ""Worthy of any true-crime novel or TV show, this type of clue hunting can be very integral in the field of forensics."" —Medical Daily ""This is a deep book, in some respects, but it's also engaging and delightfully nerdy. No true crime fan should be without it. Science lovers will relish it. The Nature of Life and Death should not be left behind."" —""Bookworm Sez"" “The Nature of Life and Death draws the reader into the invisible world of a forensic ecologist who utilizes state-of-the-art science to solve grisly crimes that would have otherwise been unsolvable. Fans of true crime such as CSI and Forensic Files will be in for a treat as Pat gives you a personal glimpse into her world and philosophy of life.” —Steffanie Strathdee, PhD, and Thomas Patterson, PhD, coauthors of The Perfect Predator: A Scientist's Race to Save Her Husband from a Deadly Superbug  “Capturing and studying the almost-invisible clues that nature leaves on victim and suspect alike, Wiltshire uses her deep knowledge of botany and palynology to recreate crime scenes and establish the guilt—and sometimes innocence—of the accused. The Nature of Life and Death is a compelling mystery, an ode to the natural world, and an engrossing account of a female scientist whose passion, expertise, and deep curiousity created an entirely new branch of crime solving.” —Cat Warren, author of the New York Times bestseller What the Dog Knows: Scent, Science, and the Amazing Ways Dogs Perceive the World "


A New York Times Book Review New & Noteworthy Pick One of Science News' Favorite Science Books of the 2019 The Nature of Life and Death is one of those extraordinary books that will appeal to almost everyone. If you're a Mary Roach fan, fascinated by the macabre and grotesque, you'll get to follow Wiltshire into mortuaries and watch her pick apart cadavers. If you're a Lab Girl fan, inspired by stories of women blazing new trails in science, that's Wiltshire's entire career. If you're a gardener, you will love knowing how often botany has saved the day. And if you're a crime fiction fan--well, you've found your new favorite sleuth. --The Washington Post Crabby, brilliant and brittle, but also quite tender when it comes to the loss and pain of grieving families, Ms. Wiltshire seems to come straight out of a British detective series. She's an eccentric who, after proving guilt in an Albanian gang murder, goes home, puts on her sweat pants, makes herself a dinner of beans and toast and cuddles with her cat. With a lead character like this, the science and crimes, while highly readable, are mainly stages and props for this engaging and enlightening one-woman show. --The Wall Street Journal A British forensic ecologist, Wiltshire studies the natural world for clues to criminal activity: part Discovery Channel, part C.S.I. Her autobiography will change the way you view your environment. --The New York Times Book Review Weaving science writing with true crime stories, The Nature of Life and Death is a must-read for true crime fans who feel burned out on the genre. --Bustle Enjoy this book. It will leave its trace on you. --Science Magazine Fascinating through and through, the tales Wiltshire shares are worthy of any true-crime novel or TV drama such as NCIS. --Science News Wiltshire writes like the scientist she is...the subject matter is fascinating, and Wiltshire makes a good case for curiousity as she steps through the process of tracking details and solving mysteries. --Outside Magazine How this mild-mannered but fiercely dedicated academician came to muck around in woodlands, bogs, and parks searching for clues that would otherwise escape the less botanically astute makes for a fiendishly good memoir. Though many scenes are not for the fainthearted, Wiltshire's truthful and candid attitude provides a stellar glimpse into this fascinating field of criminal investigation. --Booklist [The Nature of Life and Death] is reminiscent at times of Mary Roach's Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers and also the television show Bones....Fascinating for readers who enjoy science, including ecology and botany, and who aren't too squeamish. --Library Journal An autobiography well supplied with personal opinions along with entertaining if sometimes squirm-inducing triumps of criminal investigation. --Kirkus Reviews What is forensice ecology? Wiltshire...answers that question in her gracefully written first book for a general audience....CSI fans will be enthralled. --Publishers Weekly Worthy of any true-crime novel or TV show, this type of clue hunting can be very integral in the field of forensics. --Medical Daily This is a deep book, in some respects, but it's also engaging and delightfully nerdy. No true crime fan should be without it. Science lovers will relish it. The Nature of Life and Death should not be left behind. --Bookworm Sez The Nature of Life and Death draws the reader into the invisible world of a forensic ecologist who utilizes state-of-the-art science to solve grisly crimes that would have otherwise been unsolvable. Fans of true crime such as CSI and Forensic Files will be in for a treat as Pat gives you a personal glimpse into her world and philosophy of life. --Steffanie Strathdee, PhD, and Thomas Patterson, PhD, coauthors of The Perfect Predator: A Scientist's Race to Save Her Husband from a Deadly Superbug Capturing and studying the almost-invisible clues that nature leaves on victim and suspect alike, Wiltshire uses her deep knowledge of botany and palynology to recreate crime scenes and establish the guilt--and sometimes innocence--of the accused. The Nature of Life and Death is a compelling mystery, an ode to the natural world, and an engrossing account of a female scientist whose passion, expertise, and deep curiousity created an entirely new branch of crime solving. --Cat Warren, author of the New York Times bestseller What the Dog Knows: Scent, Science, and the Amazing Ways Dogs Perceive the World


Author Information

Professor Patricia Wiltshire is a forensic ecologist, botanist, and palynologist, and also has a background in environmental archaeology. She has worked with every police force in the United Kingdom, and on many high-profile cases. She regularly lectures at conferences and scientific meetings all over the world, and is active in research and publishing, as well as university teaching. Wiltshire is an experienced expert witness for both the prosecution and defense, and is a registered expert with the National Crime Agency. She is a fellow of the Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences, the Royal Society of Biology, and the Linnean Society.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

lgn

al

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List