No Island Too Far

No Island Too Far

Searching for Seabirds on Remote Specks of Land

  • Travel to 40-odd islands spanning all the world’s oceans, some so remote that you might not have heard of them.
  • Discover the fascinating wildlife and unique ecology that have developed in some of the world's farthest-flung locations.
  • Share the vicissitudes of life in the Juan Fernández archipelago, where the real-life Robinson Crusoe was marooned 300 years ago.
    £26.00

    Tags:
    • adventure
    • birds
    • Coming Soon
    • ecology
    • islands
    • memoirs
    • ornithology
    • seabirds
    • travel

    Description

    Throughout a lifetime of biological and seabird research, Michael Brooke has been blessed with the opportunity to visit a huge array of islands dotted across all the oceans of the world. His is an island list fit to make the armchair traveller green with envy – and potentially seasick. Truly no island has been too far: from St Kilda to Spitsbergen, from Hawaii to the furthest reaches of the Southern Ocean, with all manner of destinations in between.

    In this deeply knowledgeable and at times humorous book, the author shares the experience of stupendous scenery, amazing wildlife and cutting-edge scientific investigation, all blended with idiosyncratic adventures. We discover a great deal about the peculiar ecology and unique species of islands, looking at everything from plants, mammals, reptiles and birds to human aspects, with a splash of history and anecdote.

    The engaging journey will appeal to anyone who wants to learn about islands that they will probably never visit in person. The reader will share the day-to-day grind and exhilaration of undertaking fieldwork in remote situations, and reflect on the curious mindset that enables equal pleasure to be extracted from, say, Sicilian architecture and the inexpressibly brown landscape of Cabo Verde.

    DOI: 10.53061/XPEP1587

    About the Author

    After completing an Oxford doctoral thesis on the burrow-nesting seabirds of the Welsh island of Skokholm, Michael Brooke has been linked to the University of Cambridge as a teacher, curator and researcher. He has scoured islands across the world, both near and immensely far, to discover more about the lives of seabirds, enduring discomfort and rejoicing in quirky adventures. As well as scientific papers, he has written widely for magazines and national newspapers and authored several books.

    Bibliographic Information

    • 344 pages
    • 16 page colour plate section
    • BISAC SCI070040, NAT043000, SCI020000
    • BIC PSVW6, WNCB, RNC