Robert McCracken Peck is a naturalist, writer, and historian with a special interest in the intersection of science, history, and art. As Senior Fellow of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (now part of Drexel University), he has chronicled historical and contemporary scientific research expeditions. Among Peck’s most recent books are The Natural History of Edward Lear and A Glorious Enterprise: The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, co-authored with Patricia T. Stroud. Rosamond Purcell’s striking photographs of objects from the natural and man-made world have earned her international acclaim. Her collaborations with such diverse intellects as Stephen Jay Gould and Ricky Jay testify to the breadth of her interests: the murky boundary between art and science and the universal human need to collect and classify. Her numerous books include Illuminations, A Glorious Enterprise: The Museum of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, and Owls Head: On the Nature of Lost Things.
Buried deep in the archives of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia is a remarkable set of 12 bound volumes containing a collection of what one 19th-century amateur naturalist believed--30 years before Charles Darwin's Descent of Man was published--would unravel the mystery of human evolution: specimens of hair gathered from animals and people from all over the globe, including hair samples from 13 of the first U.S. presidents. More than 100 photographs accompany Peck's account of the story behind these obsessively handcrafted volumes. --Publishers Weekly