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Supereroi per natura

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Una straordinaria avventura alla scoperta dei superpoteri degli esseri viventi più insospettabili.
Formiche, tardigradi, funghi e orsi polari ci raccontano storie di incredibile resilienza naturale, esempi preziosi in vista delle sfide che affronteremo.
Dai deserti infuocati ai fondali marini ghiacciati, dalle vette più alte dell’Himalaya alle profondità abissali degli oceani, esistono habitat che sembrano proibitivi per la vita e che invece pullulano di organismi straordinariamente adattati. Nelle foreste del Nordamerica, le rane del legno si risvegliano ogni primavera da veri e propri blocchi di ghiaccio. Per affrontare ambienti con risorse alimentari imprevedibili o sporadiche, i crotali di Shedao riducono e rigenerano il proprio apparato digerente: l’intestino si restringe, il trasporto dei nutrienti cessa e il serpente devia il flusso sanguigno verso altre parti del corpo. Sotto il sole sahariano, protette da peli argentati, le formiche del deserto corrono nel caldo di mezzogiorno, letale per qualsiasi altro animale. Sul fondo dei laghi ghiacciati, le tartarughe palustri dipinte sopravvivono per mesi senza respirare ossigeno. Nel sito del disastro di Chernobyl, alcuni funghi sfruttano le radiazioni per prosperare…

Nel corso di questa avventura straordinaria, Alex Riley illumina gli ecosistemi di ogni continente per raccontare le storie di creature che sembrano supereroi dei fumetti, capaci di resistere a privazioni inimmaginabili – di acqua, ossigeno, cibo, luce solare – e a estremi di calore e gelo, di pressione e altitudine, insegnandoci che l’evoluzione può e sa ritagliarsi una nicchia praticamente ovunque.

Supereroi per natura è un libro pieno di storie incredibili da divorare tutte d’un fiato, un saggio carico di ottimismo che ci mostra che, ai confini estremi della natura, le regole della biologia come le conosciamo possono essere riscritte e che, nell’ingegno e nella persistenza della vita di fronte a calamità e cambiamenti, possiamo trovare speranza per il futuro della Terra.

352 pages, Paperback

Published March 1, 2026

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About the author

Alex Riley

2 books38 followers
Alex Riley is an award-winning science writer and the author of Super Natural and A Cure for Darkness. A former research scientist at the Natural History Museum in London, he has coauthored peer-reviewed scientific research and published his popular science reporting in New Scientist, PBS’s NOVA Next, the BBC, Aeon, and Nautilus Magazine, among others. He lives in Devon, UK, with his family.

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5 stars
45 (27%)
4 stars
71 (42%)
3 stars
48 (28%)
2 stars
1 (<1%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews
Profile Image for CatReader.
1,134 reviews222 followers
November 18, 2025
Alex Riley is a British science writer; 2025's Super Natural is his second popular science book (after 2021's A Cure for Darkness: The Story of Depression and How We Treat It). Super Natural explores extreme adaptations by various organisms that have made them resilient to extreme environmental factors like cold, heat, radiation, etc. Though Riley isn't the first to write a book on these themes, and isn't a researcher in his own right scientifically studying these phenomena, I think he does a respectable job of covering these topics in a way that'll be of interest to generally science-curious audiences. I listened to the audiobook narrated by the author, which I found to be unfortunately read in a somniferous manner, though YMMV.

Further reading: biology in the extremes
Ends of the Earth: Journeys to the Polar Regions in Search of Life, the Cosmos, and Our Future by Neil Shubin
Below the Edge of Darkness: A Memoir of Exploring Light and Life in the Deep Sea by Edith Widder
Water, Ice, And Stone: Science and Memory on the Antarctic Lakes by Bill Green
Crossings: How Road Ecology Is Shaping the Future of Our Planet by Ben Goldfarb

My statistics:
Book 342 for 2025
Book 2268 cumulatively
Profile Image for Susan Tweit.
54 reviews18 followers
October 11, 2025
Writing about the extraordinary qualities of living beings can easily turn into a sort of gee-whiz litany of astonishments akin to an 18th-Century cabinet of curiosities, a collection of marvels displayed without the context that gives them meaning. Science writer Alex Riley neatly avoids this problem in his new book Super Natural by organizing the stories of these fantastic lives by how they respond to extreme conditions—surviving near-complete desiccation, for instance, or oxygen deprivation, or temperatures that would boil any other life to death. Within each section, Riley describes how different plants and animals cope, weaving in science, history, and environment, how they fit into their communities, and what their lives mean to the larger picture of nature on Earth. Riley is a master storyteller, bringing these unique and sometimes bizarre beings to vivid life, along with the creative research and idiosyncratic scientists who study them. Super Natural is a great read, an epic journey through the extremes of life on this amazing planet.
Profile Image for Zana.
118 reviews19 followers
August 3, 2025
Reading Alex Riley’s Super Natural felt like revisiting my childhood obsession with National Geographic and animal documentaries! It’s packed with mind-blowing stories e.g. tardigrades (aka “moss piglets”) that can survive in all manner of extreme conditions almost unscathed (even when being flung into space and back), horses thriving in Chernobyl exclusion zone (despite the high radioactive levels that can alter DNA), deep-sea snailfish living (and thriving being “left alone”) at depths equal to Everest, and turtles in Canada that can hibernate underwater for months without breathing, and many more. It’s strangely comforting to learn how tough and adaptable life can be, and maybe this can be a lesson for all of us too. As Riley says, “Life, once it has emerged on a planet, is very hard to destroy.”
Profile Image for Anshuman Swain.
286 reviews11 followers
January 17, 2026
3.5 rounded down to 3.

The book has super interesting case studies about how love survives in extreme conditions - no oxygen, high and low temperatures, no food - and what can we learn from these examples. The text could have been better written- that is my only complaint - the author has sprinkled a little bit of unrequired jargon in a few places, isn't connecting enough threads etc. but the book is well researched.
Profile Image for Serene.
229 reviews
Did Not Finish
September 27, 2025
DNF at 58%

There's nothing wrong with this content wise, but I just didn't find it very engaging of a read for whatever reason-- something stylistically isn't clicking for me. Maybe I would have powered through but unfortunately I had multiple libby holds come in at once and some of those are. Long. So. I kinda just wanna move on. Maybe I'll come back one day
Profile Image for sam.
186 reviews7 followers
October 13, 2025
i enjoyed this book but i think my expectations were too high
1,699 reviews4 followers
February 19, 2026
Engaging writing full of interesting facts about various organisms and their adaptations to survive in extreme conditions. I think the author does a good job of really delving into exploring how these adaptations work, at least as far as a layperson can understand (I think reading about each and every oddly-designated protein involved in an adaptation would be a distraction). I do feel like there are some missteps along the way, especially when the author writes teasers about upcoming organisms at the ends of chapters or sometimes sections, since they don't always live up to the hype, and the effort seems a bit forced. In particular, he breathlessly (ha) promotes the idea that certain Loriciferans may exist in completely anoxic environments, but then immediately afterwards reveals that there are serious question about the legitimacy of those findings. I also felt like the later chapters were for some reason less interesting; like the first several chapters were just packed full of interesting examples of creatures with the relevant adaptations, while some of the later ones struggled to provide a cohesive vision exploring the topic, or only focused on a few organisms in ways that weren't especially engaging.
846 reviews41 followers
July 12, 2025
Reading this book evoked in me a sense of wonder and curiosity that has strong echoes of the many hours I spent poring over colourful Dorling Kindersley volumes in my childhood.

Riley does a great job of making his subject-matter interesting and insightful, and as each chapter essentially stands alone as a vignette about a specific group of animals and animal behaviours, this made for ideal commute reading.

I particularly enjoy the way in which Riley draws out the applications of various discoveries about animal adaptations to various harsh environments to other scientific fields, notably medicine and technology. I also like that he doesn’t attempt to pad the book out with extraneous material: together with Riley’s enthusiastic narrative voice, the book’s succinctness and clarity make this an excellent (and highly accessible) book for a non-specialist audience.
Profile Image for Zoe Ngan.
67 reviews
Read
April 3, 2026
Soft DNF. I stopped reading carefully at 25% and skimmed the rest of the book. I really wanted to love this but didn't resonate with the writing. It felt like I was reading an encyclopedia: fascinating in parts but mostly dull.

I have always thought of life in a way that's relevant to me (i.e. I need air, water, etc. and therefore all life must too) so I appreciated how this book presented evidence of the contrary. You can tell that the author is truly fascinated by what he's encountered and I respect that.

I did learn some interesting things, like how redwood trees germinated best in the ashes of fires left by Native Americans (which, as they died from slaughter & disease, led to the lost generation of redwoods), among other things. It's fascinating how life finds a way to thrive against all odds.
Profile Image for Ben Goldfarb.
Author 2 books423 followers
December 4, 2025
Had the honor of blurbing this one for the jacket; here's what I wrote:

"SUPER NATURAL is a mind-expanding romp through Earth’s most extreme environments and the astonishing creatures who flourish in them. With awe and curiosity, Alex Riley plumbs the abyssal plains, the polar ice caps, and every habitat in between to reveal the tenacity, diversity, and flat-out weirdness of life on our harsh, hospitable planet."

23 reviews
December 3, 2025
A very interesting, documentary-style nature book that brings animals to life vividly, showing them striving to live. Humans can also draw strength from it.
Profile Image for Liam Bittles.
104 reviews
January 25, 2026
A deeply fascinating read. Highly recommend this to anyone with even a passing interest in biology.
Profile Image for Brandon.
134 reviews8 followers
February 22, 2026
Really interesting book, and it makes sci-fi writers seem unoriginal. There are more unique and "alien" animals on earth already than we ever see in any form of media.
27 reviews
March 14, 2026
Engagingly written with good flow. I learned a lot from this book: photosynthesis, chemosynthesis and radiosynthesis. There's even bacteria living in rocks deep within the earth?!
238 reviews
December 26, 2025
It’s not in depth on any one topic, but almost every page had me saying, “that’s so cool!” about something. I learned a ton of stuff I did not know. I felt like this author did a good job of being optimistic about the possibilities inherent in life’s adaptive, unrelenting nature, while hinting realistically at the fact that life may ultimately go on without us, in ways that our species wouldn’t even recognize.
Profile Image for Sarah Weyand Winchester.
356 reviews2 followers
March 19, 2026
(4 stars) I thought this was an interesting listen, and pretty hopeful in a way I wasn't expecting. I liked all the commentary about the tenacity of life and its ability to persist, and I learned a lot about some species I wasn't familiar with. I didn't think this was anything overly special; I've liked other books like AN IMMENSE WORLD more. But this was still a good time.
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews