The Book of Barely Imagined Beings by Caspar Henderson

News cover The Book of Barely Imagined Beings by Caspar Henderson
27 Dec 2012 01:03:08 In The Book of Barely Imagined Beings Caspar Henderson tells us that "for much of human history attempts to understand and define ourselves have been closely linked to how we see and represent other animals." Bestiaries are not just classical or medieval works, but part of a tradition that stretches back to the cave paintings of Lascaux and Chauvet, art that is painstakingly accurate as well as possessed of great symbolic power. Inspired by Jorge Luis Borges's Book of Imaginary Beings, he asked himself if it would be possible to create a modern bestiary that was populated not by fabled animals, but by real ones. In his introduction he observes that we have so little knowledge of most of them that, for the most part, we have "barely imagined them". So begins Henderson's project: a spellbinding book that seeks to astonish us with the sheer intricacy, diversity and multiplicity of life forms that share our planet. In what he modestly calls a "stab" at a 21st-century bestiary, he fuses zoology, literature, mythology, history, paleontology, anecdote and art through 27 brilliantly executed essays – one creature for each letter of the alphabet (he enigmatically chooses two for X – the Xenoglaux and Xenophyophore). Each concludes with a philosophical reflection, often related to humanity's impact on our fellow creatures, that takes the place of the medieval bestiary's "moral". These are essays in the original, Montaignesque sense of the word, and range freely over whatever topic takes the author's fancy. So a discussion of turtles leads to an exploration of the place of Brahma in Hindu cosmology. A passage on the Cuban missile crisis leads into an account of Russian attempts to impregnate chimpanzees with human sperm. An encomium to octopuses leads into a reflection on the value of a happy childhood. Occasionally Henderson offers signposts. The chapter "Nautilus" promises to explore three wonders associated with this subclass of cephalopods: their lifespan (leading into a discussion of ammonites, Italo Calvino and Tristram Shandy), their chambered shells (naval warfare, submarines and Jules Verne) and their eyesight (eagle acuity, pin-hole cameras, and daguerreotypes). But the reader is often treated to rocambolesque free-association, to rival that of Laurence Sterne or Robert Burton. Charles Darwin is one of Henderson's heroes, as are the 17th century physician and polymath Sir Thomas Browne and his late, great admirer WG Sebald. There is a sort of nature-writing that enchants by encouraging us to re-examine the familiar, superbly expressed by, for example, Annie Dillard. But while he acknowledges it, Henderson turns his back on this tradition, instead giving us a tour of bizarre species that most of us will never encounter. Two-thirds of the examples he has chosen come from the sea, reflecting the fact that two-thirds of our world is covered by water. There are other similarities with the original bestiaries. Beautifully illustrated with photographs and diagrams, with each chapter decorated by artwork in the style of a medieval folio illumination, Henderson's book is packed with marginalia, printed in red ink and relating back to red lettering within the body of the text. The result is a sort of medieval hyperlink, where the eye is drawn out from the text to the margins to explore extraordinarily obscure quotations, facts or interpolations. Some examples: octopuses use copper instead of iron in their haemoglobin; the word for "tortoise" in Hungarian means "bowl-frog"; phytoplankton productivity is intimately related to the prevalence of whale shit; there are diatoms in the sea with names such as "the Fathead Congregant" and "the Crucial Pocket-Compass". Henderson is fond of musical metaphors ("The oak is like a massive, turbulent musical score, the nautilus shell is like a chord resolved"), and I could venture one of my own: that these marginalia are like arpeggios on the chords that move through the symphony of the book. None is essential, but each of them adds to the harmony of the whole. I marked up so many in my own copy that when I finished it, I began again reading only in the margins.
 

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