One Step Sideways, Three Steps Forward: One Womans Path to Becoming a Biologist
By (Author) B. Rosemary Grant
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
11th September 2024
United States
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
Evolution
Gender studies: women and girls
570.92
Hardback
328
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
The story of the unorthodox and inspiring life and career of a pioneering biologist
Scientist Rosemary Grants journey in life has involved detours and sidestepsnot the shortest or the straightest of paths, but one that has led her to the top of evolutionary biology. In this engaging and moving book, Grant tells the story of her life and careerfrom her childhood love of nature in Englands Lake District to an undergraduate education at the University of Edinburgh through a swerve to Canada and teaching, followed by marriage, children, a PhD at age 49, and her lifes work with Darwins finches in the Galpagos islands. Grants unorthodox career is one womans solution to the problem of combining professional life as a field biologist with raising a family.
Grant describes her youthful interest in fossils, which inspired her to imagine another world, distant yet connected in timeand which anticipated her later work in evolutionary biology. She and her husband, Peter Grant, visited the Galpagos archipelago annually for forty years, tracking the fates of the finches on the small, uninhabited island of Daphne Major. Their work has profoundly altered our understanding of how a group of eighteen species have diversified from a single ancestral species, demonstrating that evolution by natural selection can be observed and interpreted in an entirely natural environment. Grants story shows the rewards of following a winding path and the joy of working closely with a partner, sharing ideas, disappointments, and successes.
B. Rosemary Grant is research scholar emerita at Princeton University. She is the author (with Peter R. Grant) of How and Why Species Multiply and 40 Years of Evolution: Darwins Finches on Daphne Major Island (both Princeton).