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Good Reads  Palaeontology  Palaeozoology & Extinctions

King Tyrant A Natural History of Tyrannosaurus rex

Popular Science New
By: Mark P Witton(Author)
310 pages, 150+ colour & b/w photos and colour & b/w illustrations
NHBS
King Tyrant offers a grounded, fact-based overview of the scientific consensus on all things T. rex that is both brilliantly executed and beautifully illustrated.
King Tyrant
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  • King Tyrant ISBN: 9780691245584 Hardback May 2025 In stock
    £35.00
    #265844
Price: £35.00
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About this book

Tyrannosaurus rex is the world's favourite dinosaur, adored by the public and the subject of intense study and debate by palaeontologists. This stunningly illustrated book brings together everything we have learned about T. rex – the "King of the Tyrant Lizards" – since it was first given its famous name in 1905. It presents these creatures as science knows them rather than the version portrayed in movies, revealing them to be dramatically different, and far more amazing, than ever imagined. With numerous original paintings and diagrams by the author, King Tyrant draws on the latest discoveries to offer a modern understanding of Tyrannosaurus, pulling back the curtain of media hype that often obscures these extraordinary extinct animals while cementing their reputation as the most formidable carnivores of the Mesozoic.

- Features more than 150 breathtaking illustrations, photos, and diagrams
- Covers everything from the research history of T. rex to their anatomy, physiology, biomechanics, behaviour, and extinction
- Reveals how the Tyrannosaurus known to science is characterized as much by radical changes in body form throughout its growth as its enormous size and powerful jaws
- Discloses details about their lifestyles and behaviour evidenced from fossils, from violent face-biting between rivals to their capacity to literally pull the heads off Triceratops carcasses
- Gets to the bottom of the many controversies surrounding T. rex, such as: Was there really more than one species of Tyrannosaurus? Did they live and hunt in groups? How fast could they run and how hard could they bite? Can we truly distinguish males from females?
- Discusses T. rex in popular culture, showing how our love for this dinosaur has both helped and hindered research

Customer Reviews (1)

  • Sets the standard for what good popular science can be
    By Leon (NHBS Catalogue Editor) 12 Jun 2025 Written for Hardback


    When Princeton University Press announced King Tyrant, I was beyond excited. Whether it is pterosaurs, palaeoart, or the Crystal Palace dinosaurs; whatever palaeontologist and palaeoartist Mark Witton writes on has so far been brilliant, and King Tyrant very much continues that tradition. Do not let the pretty pictures fool you; this is not a children's book but a grounded, fact-based overview of the scientific consensus on all things Tyrannosaurus rex, combined with numerous informative diagrams and Witton's gorgeous palaeoart. The execution of this book sets the standard for what good popular science can be and is a model that other authors and publishers can aspire to.

    Even if you know nothing about dinosaurs, T. rex is the one name you will recognise, such is the fame of this extinct animal. Surely, books about it are a dime a dozen? In a recent interview on the Love in the Time of Chasmosaurs podcast, Witton pointed out that, surprisingly, this is not the case. Hone's book covered the family at large, but, aside from two technical books in recent decades, the last popular treatment was Horner & Lessem's book in 1993. That might just as well be prehistory, given how much research has advanced and how many more fossils have been found since then. This is a clear case of Witton writing the book that he wanted to read.

    Given how frequently the name T. rex crops up, you might even get a bit annoyed: not you again! All the more reason to read this book. Witton is acutely aware that a veritable subculture has grown up around this one species that "sits, sometimes uncomfortably, on the boundary between science and sensationalism" (p. 1). These popular depictions, often carrying with them an air of scientific authority, bleed into people's consciousness, creating something less of a dinosaur and more of a chimaera, with traits both exaggerated and fictional. One of Witton's most important goals with King Tyrant is to "deconstruct hype and controversy" (p. 41). The first chapter daringly combines a précis of the first century of research with an examination of the sociological side. How did this particular species become palaeontology's rock star? It is a fascinating history that starts at the American Museum of Natural History who promoted it to attract large crowds. It was "proverbial lightning in a bottle" (p. 278), with an influential legacy that lasts to this day in movies, documentaries, and merchandise. And yet, popular depictions "have nothing on what science tells us about the reality of Tyrannosaurus rex" (p. 279).

    The bulk of the book thus explores what the science actually shows. The remaining six chapters flow logically into each other: the definition and taxonomy of the species; internal and external anatomy; physiology, growth, sensory biology, locomotion, etc. (i.e., what all this anatomy might have been capable of); ecology and behaviour; and extinction. Indeed, the writing is one of the two highlights of this book. Witton strikes that fine balance between going into quite some technical detail and yet keeping it entertaining. The result is a well-grounded and accessible summary of the scientific consensus on numerous topics.

    T. rex, more than any other species, attracts a lot of fringe ideas from inside and outside of academia, and Witton leaves no rock unturned. On the one hand, there are the minority views and "non-troversies" (thanks Witton, I am stealing that brilliant term) that get far too much airtime, such as the existence (or not) of a dwarf species, "Nanotyrannus", or the scavenging hypothesis, the notion that T. rex was a scavenger rather than a hunter. Needless to say, neither idea curries much favour among professionals. On the other hand, actual scientific debates are often ignored by the press. Opinions are divided on whether dinosaurs were already on their way out before the asteroid impact or were still in their prime. Witton provides the best overview of this topic that I have read so far.

    In The Future of Dinosaurs, Hone pointed out the frequent disparity between what people *think* we know, and what we actually know – and plenty of examples of this feature here. Some confident depictions are almost completely fictitious. The trope of the roaring T. rex leads to the question of whether dinosaurs as a group vocalised at all! This is not "overzealous scientific conservatism" (p. 159); we have found, all told, one whole fossilised voice box. The ensuing discussion on the evolution of vocalisation in birds, dinosaurs, and other reptiles shows the complexities and competing scenarios. The opposite also holds: there are topics where the general public does not realise just how much palaeontologists know, such as the anatomy of T. rex‘s face or its remarkable growth pattern with age.

    The other highlight of this book is the illustrations, both the artwork and the diagrams. Witton is an accomplished palaeoartist who cares deeply about the scientific accuracy of his artwork. We thus get modern depictions of dinosaurs with fleshy lips and bulky muscles. Each of these paintings is worthy of a frame, and it is hard to pick favourites. The book's cover, showing T. rex rumbling a closed-mouth vocalisation (a behaviour seen in modern birds and reptiles), is, in my opinion, one of the best pieces he has ever made. The azhdarchid pterosaur stalking a juvenile T. rex on page 250 is also instantly memorable. Even when the subjects are cliché, such as T. rex near erupting volcanoes or the K–Pg impactor streaking across the sky, Witton's depictions are visually arresting. Labelled photomontages show T. rex‘s "raw osteological charisma" (p. 4), and include detailed close-ups that help you form a mental picture of what all those anatomical bits look like. Equally important are the numerous informative diagrams littered throughout the book. Witton has gone to the painstaking effort of redrawing every one of them, in the process modifying and adapting them as necessary. Instead of a mishmash of styles, ages, production values, and extraneous details, the illustrations are presented in a single unified style. It will have been a huge amount of work for something that most authors and editors would probably consider nominal gains, but it shows his attention to detail, and I, for one, rate this very highly.

    King Tyrant is an instant classic: I do not even care that much for T. rex per se, but the book's brilliant execution immediately lands it a spot in my top 5 for 2025. A compulsory buy for dinosaur enthusiasts, this book is also a valuable overview for professional palaeontologists and an inspirational example of what excellent science communication looks like.
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Biography

Mark P. Witton is a palaeontologist, author, and artist based at the University of Portsmouth. He designs and advises on extinct creatures for films and documentaries, including the hit Apple TV+ series Prehistoric Planet, and his artwork is widely featured in books and museums around the world. His books include Pterosaurs: Natural History, Evolution, Anatomy (Princeton).

Popular Science New
By: Mark P Witton(Author)
310 pages, 150+ colour & b/w photos and colour & b/w illustrations
NHBS
King Tyrant offers a grounded, fact-based overview of the scientific consensus on all things T. rex that is both brilliantly executed and beautifully illustrated.
Media reviews

"Witton writes with expertise and enthusiasm in a way that is informative to both newbies and dinosaur aficionados [...] The gorgeous illustrations in this well-cited summary and analysis make T. rex come alive for readers of all ages."
– Catherine Lantz, Library Journal

"[A] beautiful new book."
– Steve Donoghue, Open Letters Review

"The illustrations (in many instances Witton's own work) are fabulous, from technical diagrams to photographs of museum specimens, and wonderful, fanciful recreations of life as it might have been in the age of the dinosaur [...] [A] magnus opus that is both educational and entertaining."
– David Gascoigne, Travels with Birds

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