The Inside Out of Flies bookcover

The Inside Out of Flies

Add to Wishlist
4.9/5.0
21,000+ Reviews
Bookshop.org has the highest-rated customer service of any bookstore in the world

Description

About The Secret Life of Flies, also by the author:

"It's no small feat for an experienced researcher to write in a way that is accessible to a non-scientific audience, and McAlister accomplishes this.... A short, rich book by turns informative and humorous."
--The New York Times

"After reading her book it is obvious: flies rock."
--The Spectator

The Inside Out of Flies is an under-the-hood look at the astonishing mechanics of fly anatomy. Erica McAlister reveals the engineering miracles embodied in each species of fly and some of the fascinating implications they hold for human technology.

Discover the physics of the mysterious "scuba diving fly," marvel at the venomous horsefly larvae which prey on frogs, and glimpse the golden ratio in these creatures' spiral flight patterns.

McAlister touches on the emerging field of biomimetics -- the study of evolutionary adaptations to devise new technology -- and anticipates everything from medical needles based on the mosquito's proboscis to hearing aids inspired by Ormia ochracea, a tiny fly with ears on its thorax. At every juncture she uncovers unique and surprising science lessons encapsulated in the form and function of the humble fly.

Not only an expert at the top of her field, McAlister is a skilled writer who masterfully imparts knowledge while entertaining the reader with her enthusiasm and wit. Even those who would not consider reading about flies, will find themselves entertained and enlightened. This is an ideal selection for personal, public, academic and specialist libraries.

Product Details

PublisherFirefly Books
Publish DateSeptember 01, 2020
Pages288
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconHardback
EAN/UPC9780228102878
Dimensions7.8 X 5.5 X 1.1 inches | 1.4 pounds
BISAC Categories: Nature

About the Author

Erica McAlister is Curator of Diptera (flies) at the Natural History Museum, London. She has studied in France, Australia and Costa Rica and her work with diptera has taken her all around the world. She has presented the popular BBC Radio 4 series Who's the Pest? and participated in a New York Times, Science Facebook Live interview which has been viewed over 134,000 times. She lives in the UK.

Reviews

(Review of UK edition) Contains so many fascinating facts that it is worth reading the book for these alone.--Stephen L. Doggett "FAOPMA Magazine" (7/1/2021 12:00:00 AM)
(Review of UK edition) I'd challenge anyone who's interested in the wonders of the natural world, the amazing creative force that is evolution, who really wants to understand how all of our amazing ecosystems function, not to be gripped by Erica McAlister's The Inside Out of Flies. You don't even have to read a lot of the packed detail of its 288 pages. You could just look at the pictures, in sumptuous colour and glorious detail.--Natalie Bennett "Bright Green Blog" (8/29/2021 12:00:00 AM)
"Flies are not filthy . . . they are always cleaning themselves," notes entomologist Erica McAlister's caption for a photo of a fly maintaining its antennae -- one of many eye-popping images in her erudite, irresistible natural history of the insects. She agrees with naturalist Pliny, who wrote two millennia ago that insects display nature's "exhaustless ingenuity". Consider Ephydra hians, which "scuba-dives" in alkaline lakes -- using hydrophobic hairs that trap an air bubble like an external lung -- to lay its eggs on the lake bottom.--Andrew Robinson "nature.com" (9/22/2020 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of UK edition: ] Not only is her subject matter engrossing and outlandish, but McAlister is also enthusiastic and witty...The Inside Out of Flies is much more than just a carnival of the bizarre. McAlister introduces plenty of serious biology here and mines the research literature for little-known but captivating nuggets... McAlister is an inspired spokeswoman for dipterology and entomology more generally, combining a heartfelt sense of wonder at the small things around us with a knack for popularizing science. The Inside Out of Flies, together with its predecessor The Secret Life of Flies, are must-read books for anyone interested in insects.-- "The Inquisitive Biologist" (8/21/2020 12:00:00 AM)
[Review of UK edition: ] On the last page of her wonderful book The Inside Out of Flies, Erica McAlister wonders if she might ever produce a popular science book that does justice to the insects that she, unashamedly, loves. Suffice to say that she has, and that she has this reviewer ordering her earlier book The Secret Life of Flies for its likely entertainment value as well as its erudition. I am among the many readers who will never look at a fly in quite the same way again and will now hesitate or desist from swatting them. Alongside the text the scanning electron microscope photographs that illustrate the many points raised are so good and so numerous that it almost becomes a coffee table book. But it is the writing (and the flies) that deserves the champagne. So much information and so much wit... 288 pages of sheer delight that should be read by anyone interested in natural history not just entomologists and not just dipterologists. It more or less throws down the gauntlet to other scientists working on other groups of animals to come up with anything as diverse, bizarre or downright interesting as flies.--J.D Charlwood "The Biologist" (10/23/2020 12:00:00 AM)
Dr. McAlister's writing is like talking to the most enthusiastic co-worker in the lab or collection... The Inside Out of Flies contains a huge number of new, fascinating tidbits about Diptera, their morphology, ecology, physiology, and overwhelming diversity. In a clever move, the book is organized head to tail... This could be all very text bookish, but it is not. It is Erica telling you cool things... Photos are abundant, high quality, and full colour. There is also a careful balance between explanatory diagrams and Fly Eye Candy. At ten chapters and nearly 300 pages, it is not a book light on text. The readable style, however, makes it easy to pick up, be fascinated by, and then return to later... [McAlister] has what is always in style in popular science books -- a genuine enthusiasm and love for a subject that she knows a great deal about.--Joel Gibson "The Bulletin of Entomological Society of Canada" (6/1/2021 12:00:00 AM)
Erica McAlister is an acknowledged expert at the top of her field and a skilled writer who masterfully imparts knowledge while entertaining the reader with her enthusiasm and wit. With immense value for students and non- specialist general readers with an interest in the subject, The Inside Out of Flies is an ideal and unreservedly recommended addition to personal reading lists, as well as community, college, university, and specialist or corporate library collections.-- "Midwest Book Review" (1/31/2020 12:00:00 AM)
Erica McAlister is the flies' best friend--knowledgeable, experienced, passionate about both her chosen field and turning others on to the mysteries and magic of the Diptera... McAlister eschews anything like a standard text-book approach, telling stories instead, often about the fascinating and highly variable extremes exhibited by this large and disparate group... The result is a fresh appreciation of these arcane animals that all too often are seen from the working end of a fly swatter or can of repellent.--Barry Cottam "The Canadian Field-Naturalist" (11/28/2020 12:00:00 AM)
Flies are among the most underrated animals on our planet, but McAlister is on a mission to change that... Her adoration for flies is utterly infectious and her accessible accounts of cutting-edge research are interspersed with amusing anecdotes that will be sure to induce a giggle.--Ashleigh Whiffin "BBC Wildlife" (10/1/2020 12:00:00 AM)
It is hard to imagine a more ardent fly nerd than Erica McAlister... She devotes a chapter to each distinct region of fly anatomy, spotlighting bizarre organs and physiological marvels... Highly enlarged and exquisitely detailed color images add graphic impact to the author's enthusiastic text... The charm of these creatures to entomologists rests not simply on grotesquery, but on the many questions they raise about the origins and evolutionary functions of their ingenious adaptations. McAlister's writing is a powerful expression of that charm.--Laurence A. Marschall "Natural History Magazine" (2/1/2021 12:00:00 AM)
Readers may not come to love these creatures, but they will likely grow to see them as more than simply germ-laden pests. Recommended for most libraries.--Maggie Knapp "Library Journal" (2/1/2021 12:00:00 AM)
Scientist Erica McAlister shares her passion for and knowledge of these underappreciated dipterans... Colorful photographs and an easy-to-read writing style make learning about flies engaging and attainable... A fun addition to a school library in middle and secondary schools. It would be much appreciated by third- and fourth-year Biology students who are looking to specialize in entomology.--Kim Zumach "Green Teacher Magazine" (3/29/2021 12:00:00 AM)
Selection, Best Reference Books of 2020... If anyone could elevate the fly's image, it is McAlister (curator of Diptera, Natural History Museum, London), who sets out to right the insect's "incredibly poor PR" with taxonomic discussion, anatomy lessons, flight mechanics, and more. Photos, illustrations, and archival drawings range from icky to stunning and minutely detailed. The science-oriented writing is meticulous yet never dull, and occasionally amusing. If readers are a bit slower to reach for the swatter, McAlister has done her job.-- "Library Journal" (3/8/2021 12:00:00 AM)
This is a wonderful volume, of potential interest and use to a wide variety of readers interested in biology, entomology, behavior, and evolution.--Catherine Hibbitt "American Biology Teacher" (2/1/2023 12:00:00 AM)

Earn by promoting books

Earn money by sharing your favorite books through our Affiliate program.sign up to affiliate program link
Become an affiliate