I listened to the audio book, ready by Pippa Haywood.
Not a huge fan of the narration, it was a bit breathy, worthy, and 'keen'. I would allow that may have been due to the writing that she was interpreting.
Golly. So many lists to say the same when describing one thing. For example describing a cave painting:
"Wealding spears, choreography of flickering movement, Silhouettes of man beasts in antlers, voices from behind rocks, whisperings of storytellers, mimicry of owls, the bellows of bison, the piping of flutes, the rattle of seed pods, drumming on skins, beating on wood".
and
We lived hunting, foraging, protecting our young, bringing firewood to our dens.
We made up with our skills: hunting, sharp spears, stone toos, tricks, teamwork, butchery, cooking, co operation, and lau.nguage.
We knew every plant, root, nut, berry, seed. Every drinking place, every termite mound, every nest.
It just seemed to be endless lists of things. Every concept had a list attached to describe it. It was tedious.
I read the reviews after I had listened to about 30 mins and from the reviews gleaned that it was going to turn into a book about how humans had mistreated and exploited animals. I really didn't want to read that. I have a hard enough time knowing just from the knowledge I already have and social media, and I am a vegetarian for that very reason. I thought it was an ecological book in the vein of 'Entangled life" or "Underland"
Stopped listening at that point (20 - 30 minutes in).
A book that is not for me.