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40 Weeks: A Human Pregnancy and 81 Other Ways to Reproduce

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

40 Weeks: A Human Pregnancy and 81 Other Ways to Reproduce

Contributors:

By (Author) Anna Blix
Translated by Nichola Smalley

ISBN:

9781529434811

Publisher:

Quercus Publishing

Imprint:

MacLehose Press

Publication Date:

11th March 2025

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Memoirs
Ethology and animal behaviour
Zoology: invertebrates
Zoology: mammals (mammalogy)
Zoology: primates (primatology)
Zoology: marine and freshwater mammals
Evolution

Dewey:

618.2

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

304

Dimensions:

Width 134mm, Height 214mm, Spine 26mm

Weight:

299g

Description

It takes 40 weeks to grow a human baby. Along the way, the relationship between the foetus and the pregnant woman bears resemblance to that of a parasite and its host. One takes and takes, while the other continue to give, risking their health in the process.

Anna Blix takes the reader on a personal, investigative, and deeply fascinating journey through each of the 40 weeks in a human pregnancy. Parallelly, for each week, we meet other creatures who have just delivered their next generation into the world. The bacteria E. coli has multiplied by two within 20 minutes. An Eastern grey kangaroo is pregnant for just 5 weeks before giving birth to a baby the size of a bean, which then crawls into its pouch to grow. And the birds with the longest incubation period of all, the wandering albatross, is done with their incubation period after only 10 weeks.

Why do we as humans carry our babies inside our bodies for so long, and is there a reason that we are throwing up and feeling nauseous Are there better ways to reproduce And does any living creature reproduce in a stranger way than us humans

This book gives evolutionary comfort throughout the troubles of pregnancy, and an explanation as to how we ended up here: as the smartest species with the most tiresome, but nonetheless not such a bad way to reproduce.

Translated from the Norwegian by Nicola Smalley

Reviews

A winner. I doubt I'll have the pleasure of reading anything better this year * Aftenposten *
Highly entertaining and educational . . . A joy to read . . . Blix is a master at making complex science understandable to regular people -- Klassekampen
There is no better literature than great non-fiction . . . The most amazing stories about mating, pregnancy, gender and sexuality * Dagbladet *

Author Bio

Anna Blix is a biologist, author and political advisor at the Norwegian Parliament. She has long experience as a writer and communicator, and writes a regular column about science for the newspaper Morgenbladet

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