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Book reviews for "Allman,_John" sorted by average review score:

Evolving Brains
Published in Paperback by W H Freeman & Co (March, 2000)
Author: John Allman
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From small beginnings . . .
This is a sweeping examination of evolution's path leading to that mass of gray matter behind your brows. Allman has synthesized a wealth of research in producing this study. He explains in a clear, interesting style how natural selection has spent the last 500 million years tinkering with life to build complex systems from simpler ones. He is a forceful writer, supplementing a fine text with superb illustrative material to build his narrative. It's a refreshing view of natural selection's power of innovation.

Allman draws on the detailed research undertaken in recent years that has mapped the brain and detailed its operations. Like all life, beginnings were simple, but small variations among organisms had the potential for important roles. Deep in the Precambrian, floating cells developed appendages leading to hair-like structures we call "cilia". The cilia adopted dual roles: sensing the environment and responding to it. Allman explains how gene duplication led to opportunities for experiments. This process demonstrates how we can track many of steps leading to today's life forms. The original genes are usually still resident, with enhancements providing new functions added over the passing generations.

The author's explanation of the workings of chemistry in brain functions is worth close attention. Behaviour is the result of brain activity, but the interactions of various parts and functions of the brain elude simple analysis. One example is the brain chemical [neurotransmitter] serotonin which is found throughout the brain. It's impact gives monkeys their social structure while adding to the risk of suicide in humans. Neurochemistry alone doesn't explain the expansion of the human brain, nor does the author stop there. He goes on to show how bipedalism, diet, language and social behaviour all working in self-reinforcing feedback loops led to the gob of tissue that takes a fifth of our body resources to keep working. Even global climate changes played a role, coming at a time when our species was just prepared to contend with them.

The number and impact of revelations in this book are almost beyond counting. The "urban myth" that women live longer than men because of improved health practices has been disproved both by history and anthropology. A study reaching back into the 18th Century demonstrates that women have outlived men at least that long ago. Among the great apes, chimpanzee females also outlive their mates. Orangutans and gorillas have nearly parallel life spans between genders. There are also studies showing how caring fathers have extended life spans. His analysis of the development of colour vision is another novel thesis. Colour perception arose only 40 million years ago, after the demise of the dinosaurs. This raises again, the question of whether the emergence of flowering plants, which were toxic to those creatures, helped speed their demise.

While this book is not a light read, it's an informative and edifying one. Allman deals with complex topics. Adding to the elaborate range of material involving the brain, behaviour and social issues is the background of the immense time spans required in dealing with these questions in the context of evolution. Given all these constraints, he has met the challenges of the task credibly and lucidly. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]

Mind expanding material
How has the emergence of the super-sized human brain depended on the evolution of a good set of teeth? Why are the stomach and brain closely linked across the brambles of genetic code? This book answers not only those intriguing questions but also many others concerning the emergence of the brain on this planet. Especially fascinating to me was the explanation of the homeobox phenomenon, a process by which very complex mutations can arise in an organism without the mutation risking certain disaster. Being a non-biologist, I found this homeobox material quite fascinating, for it opened my eyes to how evolution could generate incredibly complex features without requiring a hundred trillion years for all the right components to come together all at once. Equally interesting are the many vestiges of our evolutionary past that are still embedded in the way our brains process information. For example, the sectors into which our brains split each of our retinae today for the purpose of signal processing: these are left overs from the days when our ancestors were prey and not predators, back when our ancestors' eyes were mounted to the sides of their heads! In summary, I would like to say that in reading this book, while just sitting in my chair, I felt myself moving up another notch on the evolutionary tree. It gave me a whole new appreciation for the miracle that is the development of brains and conscious life on this planet. A very pleasant read.

A Special Treat
"Evolving Brains" is a visual treat. Written to appeal to the lay person as well as the neurobiologist, it takes us on a magical tour of the diversity of species and the evolution of the human family. Allman's writing is remarkable for its clarity, while wide pages and ample white space add to the reader's pleasure


The Usborne Book of Paper Engineering (How to Make Series)
Published in Library Binding by Edu Dev (August, 1997)
Authors: Clive Gifford, Howard Allman, and John Woodcock
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"Beyond Infinity"
This book takes paper craft beyond the ordinary cut and paste projects. Clearly written techniques are described step-by-step. The book includes 6 pages of templates which can be traced. All projects produce 3-D results. Great to teach 'focus on task" and techniques which can be used to create other 3-D items.


Clio's Children: Dosteevsky at Semyonov Square and Other Poems
Published in Hardcover by New Directions Publishing (March, 1997)
Author: John Allman
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Clio's Children: Dostoevsky at Semyonov Square and Other Poems
Published in Paperback by W.W. Norton & Company (April, 1985)
Author: John Allman
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Curve Away from Stillness: Science Poems
Published in Paperback by New Directions Publishing (January, 1989)
Authors: John Allman and Peter S. Coleman
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Descending Fire & Other Stories
Published in Hardcover by New Directions Publishing (September, 1994)
Author: John Allman
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El Reino De Los Juguetes/Magic Toyshop: Encuentra Las Diferencias
Published in Library Binding by Edu Dev (December, 1999)
Authors: Phil Roxbee Cox, Jenny Tyler, Howard Allman, Ray Moller, Rupert Heath, John Russell, and Phil Roxbee-Cox
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Inhabited World: New & Selected Poems 1970-1995
Published in Paperback by Wallace Stevens Society Inc (October, 1995)
Author: John Allman
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Mathematical Models in Biology : An Introduction
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (September, 2003)
Authors: Elizabeth S. Allman and John A. Rhodes
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Scenarios for a Mixed Landscape
Published in Paperback by New Directions Publishing (March, 1987)
Author: John Allman
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