To see accurate pricing, please choose your delivery country.
 
 
United States
£ GBP
All Shops

British Wildlife

8 issues per year 84 pages per issue Subscription only

British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.

Subscriptions from £33 per year

Conservation Land Management

4 issues per year 44 pages per issue Subscription only

Conservation Land Management (CLM) is a quarterly magazine that is widely regarded as essential reading for all who are involved in land management for nature conservation, across the British Isles. CLM includes long-form articles, events listings, publication reviews, new product information and updates, reports of conferences and letters.

Subscriptions from £26 per year
Good Reads  Natural History  Biography, Exploration & Travel

A Curious Boy The Making of a Scientist

Biography / Memoir
By: Richard A Fortey(Author)
338 pages
NHBS
A bewitching memoir, A Curious Boy tells of palaeontologist Richard Fortey's early years and shows the power of curiosity in shaping his life.
A Curious Boy
Click to have a closer look
Select version
Average customer review
  • A Curious Boy ISBN: 9780008324001 Paperback Oct 2021 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 weeks
    £9.99
    #252752
  • A Curious Boy ISBN: 9780008323967 Hardback Feb 2021 In stock
    £19.99
    #252751
Selected version: £9.99
About this book Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

What makes a scientist? In a charming memoir, beloved and brilliant scientist Richard Fortey offers a tour of the natural world in all its joys, puzzles and curiosities.

In this memoir, Richard Fortey – a palaeontologist and natural historian – tells the story of how as a young boy he became fascinated with the natural world, leading to a long life exploring its secrets. He leads a journey through botany and birds, fossils and fungi, using a different object to lead each chapter.

A great brown trout caught by his father opens up the world of fish, streams and rivers. A blue thrush's egg takes us out tramping through water meadows and into the social world of birds and trees. Richard takes us back to his past as a small boy who was allowed a little shed at the bottom of the garden in which to play chemist, and where, with the guidance of the encyclopaedia, he made the likes of potassium cyanide from horse hoof clippings, and then the 'smelliest substance' – a chemical that when taken outside the shed's confines brought mayhem to his school, and the Central Line.

Educational and inspiring, this is a charming memoir of a life in the thrall of science and the wonders of the natural world.

Customer Reviews (1)

  • A bewitching memoir
    By Leon (NHBS Catalogue Editor) 30 Jul 2021 Written for Paperback


    If you asked ten scientists what made them choose their profession, would you get ten different answers? My instinct tells me that curiosity is an overriding factor for many. It certainly was for palaeontologist Richard Fortey. Published just days after his 75th birthday, A Curious Boy reflects on his earliest years and was such a disarming and enjoyable memoir that I finished it in a single day.

    Fortey the boy was possessed by an insatiable curiosity that encompassed almost everything: natural history, chemistry, geology, botany, mycology, palaeontology, biology, art, poetry, music, literature... his was "a sponge-like mind in a world pregnant with possibilities and discoveries" (p. 33). He refused to recognise the division between art and science, and throughout his early years, "a growing cultural life ran in parallel with my natural-history enthusiasms" (p. 160). A not-so-subtle nudge by his grammar school headmaster send him down the path scientific, but it was not until he was headed for Cambridge University to read natural sciences that he decided that this "should be an end to the intellectual blunderbuss. Time to buckle down and find a single target" (p. 226).

    More than once, his curiosity became a reprieve from life's cruel twists and turns. Without wanting to spoil it, there are two particularly painful episodes delivered here with such raw intensity that they will leave the reader stunned. His study and work became all-absorbing and bore him through these tragedies. There is also a more subtle motif of loss running through this memoir. Innocence is lost when several revelations force him to see his father in a new light. Recollections of the natural world lay bare the loss of once common birds, plants, and mammals. An old botanical field guide becomes "a record of how the environment has changed during my lifetime" (p. 200-201). Like many others, Fortey, too, has noticed today's clean windscreens after a drive through the countryside, a portent of the insidious loss of insects. "Sometimes, a longer memory is a recipe for gloom" (p. 11).

    Curiosity serves as a source of embarrassment and guilt, if only in hindsight. He reflects with some remorse on typical boyhood activities of the time, collecting birds eggs and killing butterflies to pin them in collections. Others verge more on guilty pleasures and pranks. An early fascination with chemistry drives him to synthesize and deploy ethyl isocyanide stink bombs, the "Mount Everest of the malodorous" (p. 85). A particularly disarming quality of this memoir is its unabashed honesty. Fortey observes this unusual child gorging himself on the arts and sciences, and wonders: "If I could meet my teenage intellectual apogee now I don't know whether I would admire him or feel sorry for him" (p. 180). He then deflates himself further when a chance encounter with the polymath George Steiner made him realise that "I was as short of true omniscience in the same proportion as I fell short as a poet" (p. 181).

    In that sense, I felt the book's title hid a double entendre. He remarks that his mother must have thought him a curious boy for being the only child to roam the Geological Museum in London while his peers were playing football on Saturdays. Did she mean to suggest that he was possessed of a certain queerness, in the original sense of the word? In that light, the book's cover strikes me as one of the most appropriate I have seen in a long time: a horn of plenty overflowing with the subjects of his interest, drawn in a style that reminded me of Terry Gilliam's absurd animations for Monty Python.

    But Fortey's curiosity also fuels defiance. For all the guilt over his childhood collections, he doubts that such activities have been the driving force in the population declines of animals and plants. Rather, collections are important as they "[...] are archives of what was there, regardless of moral judgements about the way the specimens were collected" (p. 44) and "claims without documentary support about how things used to be might well be treated with suspicion by the next generation" (p. 207). Similarly, taxonomy matters to him. Without names, "humans wander blindly in an unstructured wilderness" (p. 29), while "to fail to recognise species is like being unaware of words that are essential to cogent speech" (p. 210). These are sentiments that have been expressed by other authors and resonate deeply with me.

    Those interested in the science are served as well. There are some interludes here about graptolites, colonial plankton that does not really resemble anything alive today. Initially he collects their fossils at Abereiddy Bay in Wales as a boy, while a later discovery described here proofs worthy of publication before he has even written up anything about trilobites. The first trilobite collections he makes in Svalbard suggest three distinct communities, corresponding to an onshore-to-offshore depth gradient. When similar communities are retrieved in Nevada, this aligns perfectly with the then-novel theory of plate tectonics. The start of Fortey's career coincided with this idea finally finding wider acceptance in the geological community.

    Given that he has written about his work on trilobites elsewhere, they remain bit players in this book. A Curious Boy only tells the start of their story, ending with Fortey attending his first major geology conference in 1972. Some of his personal and professional adventures later in life, working at the London Natural History Museum, have been told in Dry Store Room No. 1. However, my feeling is that there is enough material for a second memoir, not unlike Dawkins did with his recent double act. I would happily make time to hear more of Fortey's remarkable life story.

    At some point, Fortey mentions that one perk of his eclectic teenage interests is that he "acquired an armoury of words that served his older version well" (p. 180), as I hope the various quotes above have revealed. There is depth and beauty to his writing and its cadence is bewitching; I read A Curious Boy in a single day. This was, shamefully, my introduction to Fortey, and I enjoyed it so much that I immediately went ahead and bought five of his previous books after finishing it.
    8 of 8 found this helpful - Was this helpful to you? Yes No

Biography

Richard Fortey retired from his position as senior palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum in 2006. He is the author of several books, including Fossils: A Key to the Past, The Hidden Landscape which won The Natural World Book of the Year in 1993, Life: An Unauthorised Biography, Trilobite! and The Earth: An Intimate History. He has been elected to be President of the Geological Society of London for its bicentennial year of 2007, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society.

Biography / Memoir
By: Richard A Fortey(Author)
338 pages
NHBS
A bewitching memoir, A Curious Boy tells of palaeontologist Richard Fortey's early years and shows the power of curiosity in shaping his life.
Media reviews

"Truth and courage are what memoirs need and this one has them both in spades [...] He never forgets that the small boy, watching his father's effortless casting on the waters of the Itchen, somehow remains permanently present inside the great, famous and lauded scientist. The unforgotten boy: that is what makes this a book a revelation"
– Adam Nicolson, winner of the 2018 Wainwright Prize

"A wonderful, absolutely beguiling glimpse into the formative life of a great scientist. I learnt a lot and really loved it"
– Richard Holmes

"Gloriously evocative"
Daily Mail

Current promotions
New and Forthcoming BooksNHBS Moth TrapBritish Wildlife MagazineBuyers Guides