PENGUINS appear with an alarmingly increasing frequency on everything from
Christmas cards to shower curtains. Young jugglers can learn their trade with
a set of stuffed cloth penguins; cooks can chop their onions on a penguin-
shaped board. The Penguin waddled and cursed his way through Batman’s
adventures. So why do these birds have such a grip on our imaginations? Why do
we warm towards what we once saw as a handy refill for an oil lamp? In Penguin
(Whittet Books, pp 128, 拢7.99 pbk), John Love explores the history of
human encounters with penguins from Vasco da Gama’s first bloody meeting in
1497 – “we killed as many as we chose” – to today’s studies of behaviour and
efforts at conservation. He discusses the survival strategies of 16 species,
marvelling at their toughness and wildly varying behaviour from burrow-
dwelling Magellanic penguins to the stalwart emperor penguin settling in for a
long winter of starvation hundreds of kilometres from the nearest food.
More from 快猫短视频
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending 快猫短视频 articles
1
The best new science-fiction books of June 2026
2
Pancreatic cancer halted by virus injection in three patients
3
Glaciers in the 'roof of the world' have suddenly started melting
4
Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything
5
3D-printed lymph nodes could widen access to CAR T-cell therapy
6
How a radical new view of life could reveal its origin 鈥 and aliens
7
Why your brain needs plenty of 鈥淎ha!鈥 moments
8
Mathematical AI helps researchers crack 50-year-old problem
9
The best new science fiction books of May 2026
10
The day quantum computers break the internet



