ERICA MCALISTER is Senior Curator for Diptera at the Natural History Museum, London. She is the author of the acclaimed books The Secret Life of Flies and The Inside Out of Flies. In 2019 she was the winner of the Zoological Society of London Award for Communicating Zoology She has presented two major Radio 4 series on insects and has been the subject of The Life Scientific. ADRIAN WASHBOURNE is an award-winning producer who spent 35 years working for BBC Radio and the World Service. He has produced landmark documentary series on botany, art and science, and the history of medicine. He has won several Association of British Science Writers awards and was awarded the 2019 Medical Journalists' Association Feature of the Year.
BOOKLIST ""The writing is accessible and full of humor; a cassette of flies packaged to be sent into space is described as 'the best mix-tape there is.' More than 80 eye-catching color images contribute to the book’s appeal. The authors are entertaining storytellers and have written a fascinating and often amusing account of how the study of insects has shaped history and continues to lead to remarkable discoveries."" AMERICAN ENTOMOLOGIST ""Erica McAlister is a master raconteur, and she draws you in immediately to a set of ten chapters, each a fascinatingly eclectic exploration of how insects did it first, how we humans found out, and the possible biomimetic or bioinspired applications of whatever wonderful thing it was that insects did first. [...] McAlister has a way with words, and a way of blending human history with natural history that makes the pages turn with pleasure."" NATURE ""Bees abound in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, symbolizing the tears of the sun god Ra, transformed after falling to Earth. Insects have long fascinated naturalists, yet much remains unclear. Estimates of the total number of species, for example, range from 5 million to 2.2 billion. But, in their enchanting, illustrated book, entomologist Erica McAlister and documentary producer Adrian Washbourne shed some light on insects: for instance, robber flies can see accurately over 0.5 metres, because their eyes have 'a type of zoom lens!'""