Available Formats
The Golden Mole: and Other Vanishing Treasure
By (Author) Katherine Rundell
Illustrated by Talya Baldwin
Faber & Faber
Faber & Faber
13th February 2024
2nd November 2023
Main
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Conservation of wildlife and habitats
333.9522
Paperback
208
Width 133mm, Height 198mm, Spine 18mm
350g
The world is more astonishing, more miraculous and more wonderful than our wildest imaginings.
'Rare and magical book.' - Bill Bryson
'A witty, intoxicating paean to Earth's most wondrous creatures.' - Observer
'Exquisite and timely.' - Maggie O'Farrell
** Shortlisted for the Waterstones and Foyles Book of the Year **
In The Golden Mole, Katherine Rundell takes us on a globe-spanning tour of the world's strangest and most awe-inspiring animals, including pangolins, wombats, lemurs and seahorses. But each of these animals is endangered. And so, this most passionately persuasive and sharply funny book is also an urgent, inspiring clarion call: to treasure and act - to save nature's vanishing wonders, before it is too late.
'Deeply affecting, intimate and wildly funny . . . I loved it.' - Edmund de Waal
'A wondrous ode to nature's astonishing beauty - and an elegy for all the life we are in the midst of destroying.' - Amia Srinivasan
'An exuberant celebration of everything from bats, crows and hedgehogs to narwhals and wombats . . . Rundell is incapable of writing a dull sentence.' - Observer
'There is a constant joy in the book . . . A sense throughout of delight and wonder, and a reminder thatthese emotions also matter - may even save us. This is the point.' - New Statesman
Katherine Rundell grew up in London, Zimbabwe and Belgium. She is the youngest female scholar to be made a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. Her award-winning and bestselling books for children have been translated into thirty languages and have multiple awards. Rundell is also the author of a book for adults Why You Should Read Children's Books, Even Though You Are So Old And Wise. She is a regular contributor to the London Review of Books.