The I Index

Endless Forms: The Secret World of Wasps

Maybe someday

43

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

37/100

Critics

50/100

Scholars

N/A

Author:

Seirian Sumner

Publisher:

Harper

Date:

July 12, 2022

A behavioural ecologist transforms our understanding of wasps, exploring these much-maligned insects’ secret world, their incredible diversity and complex social lives, and revealing how they hold our fragile ecosystem in balance.

What The Reviewers Say

Kate Simpson,
The Times Literary Supplement (UK)
... [a] detailed, example-rich study.
John Lewis-Stempel,
The Times (UK)
Sumner’s book has emerged winged, but it does not quite take to the air. She insists that the 100,000-plus species of wasp — an omnivorous insect that is the ancestor of both the bee (a vegetarian wasp) and the ant (wingless wasp) — are 'genuinely fascinating'. but she spends an inordinate amount of time talking about bees. One feels for her. We love bees. Also, the amount of research by entomologists into bees outnumbers that into wasps by a factor of three, leaving Sumner to lament about wasps: 'We know little.' This is admirably honest, if unsatisfying for a reader.
Adrian Woolfson,
The Wall Street Journal
... thought-provoking, joyous and ebullient.
Tina Panik,
Library Journal
There are references to Hunger Games and Game of Thrones, an analogy about shopping for jeans, and an impressively accessible explanation for Hamilton’s Rule, all bundled in with the historical narrative of key discoveries of earlier scientists (Jean-Henri Fabre; George and Elizabeth Peckham; Margaret Morley). Science-curious or garden-devoted readers of any level will emerge from Sumner’s book with a better understanding of ecology and a new appreciation for wasps.