Europe
The First 100 Million Years
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Narrated by:
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Rupert Farley
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By:
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Tim Flannery
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
A place of exceptional diversity, rapid change and high energy, for the past 100 million years Europe has literally been at the crossroads of the world. By virtue of its geology and geography, evolution in Europe proceeds faster than elsewhere. The continent has absorbed wave after wave of immigrant species over the millennia, taking them in, transforming them and sometimes hybridising them.
Flannery's exploration of the nature of Europe reveals a compelling intellectual drama, with a cast of heroic researchers - of whom Tim Flannery is the most recent - whose discoveries have changed our understanding of life itself.
©2019 Tim Flannery (P)2019 Penguin AudioWhat listeners say about Europe
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Tim T.
- 30-10-19
Everyone should hear/read this.
Such broad scope makes it a whistlestop tour, but engaging and provocative... makes you think.
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2 people found this helpful
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Mister Peridot
- 18-04-21
Whimsical
Flannery is a knowledgeable and able writer. He brings together a sublime array of facts and connections. But? Well its the natural history which is the main lure of this book and this natural history is dspensed in a very piecemeal and whimsical manner. Or so it seems to this listener. What's wrong with a clear narrative based on time, evolution & geology? Still. There is gold in this book. But you must endure the patter & chatter of wisdom to find it.
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Overall
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- Micheal
- 11-09-21
Interesting but scattered
Didn’t like the narration, not sure that accents were necessary in a non-fiction work. A lot of interesting info but didn’t get a sense as to why this book should be called Europe and not Eurasian natural history.
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Overall
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- veyza
- 06-12-23
Interesting content but poor reading
The natural history content is very interesting but the reading is marred by mispronunciation and terrible English accents for quoted passages.
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Overall
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Performance
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- EEL
- 19-05-20
No footnotes and no pictures in the audio version
The printed book comes with a large number of back-and-white maps, a section of colour photographs, and many footnotes that are often informative and diverting (and are in addition to endnotes, which give bibliographic information). The audio doesn't perform the footnotes and contains no pdf versions of the visual material or endnotes, making it significantly less informative than the physical book.
The performance is matter-of-fact and copes fairly well with the large number of Latinate technical terms, although often pausing before pronouncing them (suggesting they were added in later?) and frequently getting the stress-position wrong. Ditto for other foreign Proper nouns and place names in the book as a whole.
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