Lisa Margonelli is the author of Oil on the Brain, a national bestseller which the American Library Association named one of the 25 Notable Books of 2007. She has written for numerous publications, including the New York Times, Atlantic, Scientific American, National Geographic and Wired. She lives in Maine.
`Turns cutting-edge science into rich narrative by plunging deep into the termite's world...Margonelli's masterly book is a timely, thought-provoking exploration of what it means to be human, as much as what it means to be termite, and a penetrating look at the moral challenges of our ongoing technological revolution.' * <i>The New York Times</i> * `...one of the finest writers and most original thinkers we have. A surprising, swirling, fantastically unpredictable, thought-provoking, funny, and (depending on your species) delicious book.' -- Mary Roach, author of <i>Grunt</i> and <i>Gulp</i> `An eminently readable melange of the termite microcosm.' * <i>BBC Wildlife</i> * `A book about termites landed on my desk and, dear reader, it is so good that it came within a whisker of achieving the full weight of a maximum 9.8 Newtons...Governments and businesses (and the military) have invested a lot of money into termite investigations. And this excellent book follows the twists and turns of the eccentric scientists involved.' * <i>BA Business Life</i> * `In a unique voice that's wry, inventive, and acrobatic, Margonelli takes us on a termite-guided exploration of subterranean tracts of nature, science, and robotics. The book is brimming with flair. Prepare to find yourself absorbed.' -- Peter Godfrey-Smith, author of <i>Other Minds</i> `Termites are not just the destructive force that homeowners know and hate- architects of negative space, as environmental writer Lisa Margonelli wittily puts it. They also comprise a kind of entomological three-ring circus, and this round-up of research on the eusocial insects is a ticket to the show... This is a wild ride through a hidden microcosmos stretching from Australia to Namibia.' * Barbara Kiser, <i>Nature</i> * `A revealing exploration of one of the most inscrutable insects ever to dominate our planet.' -- Jonathan Balcombe, author of <i>What a Fish Knows</i> `Unlikely but fascinating...[this] far-ranging work touches on the nature of individuality, the use of drones by the military, the applicability of concepts of good and evil to science, and the creation of biofuels created using the termite gut, among other topics. Margonelli brings all of this to light by making complex, cutting-edge science understandable to the general reader, while also conveying the excitement, frustration, and plain drudgery inherent in the scientific endeavor... Margonelli has written a book as entertaining as it is informative.' * <i>Publishers Weekly</i> *