"An artful blend of E.O. Wilson and Barry Lopez, with a continental flair. Backyard naturalists, regardless of their locale, will delight in the amiable company of this witty and thoughtful guide." -- Booklist "A charming but serious warning of the need to protect our natural ecosystems from heedless, irreversible destruction." -- Kirkus Reviews "Warm and delightful: I frequently found myself wanting to put it down to go bird and bee watching, to find for myself the species [Goulson] discusses." -- NPR on A Sting in the Tale " A Sting in the Tale is both a whodunit as well as a revealing study of a bug on whom we depend a great deal." -- The Seattle Times on A Sting in the Tale "Goulson transforms what could be dry material with stinging wit.
" -- New York Post on A Sting in the Tale "Much more than a series of romantic wildlife walks. [Goulson] is adept at weaving profound biological concepts in with accounts of nearly being shot off the root by a zealous French huntswoman or decoding the head-banging knocks of deathwatch beatles.A trove of elegant and fascinating ecological tales" -- BBC Wildlife "A wonderfully entertaining one-man campaign to persuade the world to love his favourite animals--insects. A Buzz in the Meadow feels like a cross between Peter Mayle's stories of homemaking in Provence and Gerald Durrell's works of domestic mayhem among Greek wildlife. Goulson has a similar comic gift to both, but although he may choose to play it for laughs, he is the cleverest fool you could imagine.A blend of scientific evidence and amusing travelogue that engages the reader as much with the eloquence of its argument as with the charm of its good humour." -- The Mail on Sunday (London) "You can't help but be charmed by the intriguing stories of paper moths, spotted butterflies and mating praying mantises." -- The Big Issue (London) "Goulson writes with infectious enthusiasm.
His passionate interest in and defence of the planet's smallest inhabitants makes the book a lively and important read." -- The Sunday Times (London) "Goulson's sheer enthusiasm for wild things, from the lizards, mice and spiders that share his home to minute tardigrades or 'water ears' that wriggle in damp moss cushions, is that of a young Gerald Durrell on Corfu.He engages his readers in clear, lively language, avoids jargon and presents his thesis with a smile, not doom and gloom." -- The Spectator (London) "What begins as a scientfici rural idyll becomes a journey into the imperilled territory of Rachel Caron's Silent Spring. " -- Nature "[Dave Goulson] is among the brightest things in the recent flowering of composite works of nature writing, natural history and memoir." -- The Observer (London).