Publisher's Hardcover ©2020 | -- |
Feces. Juvenile literature.
Animal droppings. Juvenile literature.
Feces.
Animal droppings.
A biologist digests her own observations and those of other researchers studying poop's properties, products, and potential."Once I put my poo goggles on," the author writes, "I found fecal fun everywhere." Picking up more or less where her Something Rotten: A Fresh Look at Roadkill (2018) left off, Montgomery continues to convey her devotion to decomposition with breezy visits to labs and landfills, conversations with scat specialists, and thoroughly detailed up-close and personal notes on encounters with dead animals, guts, and writhing intestinal fauna. Piling evocative chapter heads like "Hunk of Tongue" and "Stool to Fuel" atop essays redolent with puns and double-entendres, she adds unusual nuggets of insight to her disquisitions on fertilizers and fecal transplants: the significant role dinosaurs and other prehistoric "megapoopers" played in seed dispersal, hints that certain parasitic worms may be as good for us as certain species of intestinal bacteria, and the notion that artificially preserving endangered species isn't automatically a good thing. Along with occasional diversions to, for instance, point out the environmental impact of palm oil's near ubiquity in our food and consumer goods, she further indulges her wide range of interests in footnotes on nearly every page and a closing resource list bulging with analytical commentary. Neither the scanty assortment of photos nor Gottlieb's decorative pen-and-ink vignettes include human figures.A well-stirred slurry of facts and fun for strong-stomached "poop sleuths." (index, activities, synonym chart, annotated bibliography) (Nonfiction. 11-14)
ALA Booklist (Sat Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)As with her examination of roadkill in Something Rotten (2018), Montgomery takes a similarly structured deep dive into another unsavory subject: poop. Chapters begin with the author's naturalist treks or amateur-scientist dissections of scat or animal intestines (typically retrieved from roadside accidents) and the questions they pose. To find out why dogs are being trained to identify elephant scat, how fecal transplants may treat illnesses caused by life-threatening bacteria, what role whale poop plays in an ocean's health, if intestinal worms can protect the body from autoimmune diseases, and more, Montgomery turns to experts in these pioneering (or should I say poo-ineering?) fields. The result is jaunty narration, further enlivened by interview snippets and a load of fascinating and gross-out research. Copious footnotes extend both the explanations and the author's humor. Individually the chapters make engaging scientific anecdotes, but together they reveal poop's role in the interconnectedness of earth's environment. Lengthy back matter includes even more "Fecal Fun Facts" and annotated sources. Excrement has never been so educational.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)A biologist digests her own observations and those of other researchers studying poop's properties, products, and potential."Once I put my poo goggles on," the author writes, "I found fecal fun everywhere." Picking up more or less where her Something Rotten: A Fresh Look at Roadkill (2018) left off, Montgomery continues to convey her devotion to decomposition with breezy visits to labs and landfills, conversations with scat specialists, and thoroughly detailed up-close and personal notes on encounters with dead animals, guts, and writhing intestinal fauna. Piling evocative chapter heads like "Hunk of Tongue" and "Stool to Fuel" atop essays redolent with puns and double-entendres, she adds unusual nuggets of insight to her disquisitions on fertilizers and fecal transplants: the significant role dinosaurs and other prehistoric "megapoopers" played in seed dispersal, hints that certain parasitic worms may be as good for us as certain species of intestinal bacteria, and the notion that artificially preserving endangered species isn't automatically a good thing. Along with occasional diversions to, for instance, point out the environmental impact of palm oil's near ubiquity in our food and consumer goods, she further indulges her wide range of interests in footnotes on nearly every page and a closing resource list bulging with analytical commentary. Neither the scanty assortment of photos nor Gottlieb's decorative pen-and-ink vignettes include human figures.A well-stirred slurry of facts and fun for strong-stomached "poop sleuths." (index, activities, synonym chart, annotated bibliography) (Nonfiction. 11-14)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
ALA Booklist (Sat Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2020)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
This uniquely crafted narrative nonfiction invites readers to follow the author into science labs, forests, hospitals, and landfills, as the author asks: Who uses poo? Poop is disgusting, but it's also packed with potential. One scientist spent months training a dog to track dung to better understand elephant birthing patterns. Another discovered that mastodon poop years ago is the reason we enjoy pumpkin pie today. And every week, some folks deliver their own poop to medical facilities, where it is swirled, separated, and shipped off to a hospital to be transplanted into another human. There's even a train full of human poop sludge that's stuck without a home in Alabama. This irreverent and engaging book shows that poop isn't just waste-and that dealing with it responsibly is our duty.