The Odditorium is a fascinating, quirky and beautifully illustrated gift book from the creators of the award winning Ernest Journal. Celebrating curiosity and adventure, The Odditorium explores the obsessions, achievements and failures of lesser-known but utterly remarkable individuals who exemplify the human spirit through their stories of invention, trickery, subversion and survival.
David Bramwell es un botánico, explorador, y profesor inglés. Bramwell estudió Botánica en la Universidad de Liverpool.
Premio a la "Conservación Excelente del Instituto de Investigación Botánica de Texas, en Estados Unidos.
Llegó a Canarias a principios de los 1970s para hacerse cargo de la dirección del Jardín Botánico Canario Viera y Clavijo, situado en la isla de Gran Canaria, uno de los jardines botánicos más importantes del mundo y el más importante en flora macaronésica, hasta finales de noviembre de 2012.
David Bramwell is Director of the Jardin Botanico Canario 'Viera y Clavijo'- Unidad Asociada CSIC. His current research interests include the monitoring and mapping of wild populations of threatened species, the preparation of a Flora of the Macaronesia, mapping species decline worldwide, molecular studies of genetic diversity in small populations and the effects of climate change on island plants. Juli Caujape-Castells is Head of the Department of Molecular Biodiversity and DNA bank at the Jardin Botanico Canario 'Viera y Clavijo'- Unidad Asociada CSIC. His research uses molecular data to investigate problems related to the origins, taxonomic identification, microevolution and conservation of terrestrial vascular plants endemic to, or occurring in, Macaronesia
History may be written by the victors, but it is made by people from all walks of life. Who these people are is often overlooked in the grander history books, but thankfully we have authors like David Bramwell & Jo Keeling who are prepared to poke around in the dustier areas of our past and tell the stories of those that have made their mark in one way or other.
They have split the characters in this book into five different sections, the first is Tricksters & Subversives, Creative Mavericks, Wild at Heart, Pioneers & Inventors and Explorers of the mind. In each part, there are around ten different people that they have found and are telling the story of.
There are a few that stood out for me. W Reginald Bray was one, who in the pursuit of his art, posted anything and everything that he could get in a letterbox. Quentin Crisp who was camp and gay at a time when it was illegal to be, and Alfred Wallace Russell who worked out evolution at the same time as Darwin and is buried just down the road from me in Broadstone. Two particular favourites are Flora Tristan who stood up for injustice before anyone else and Joseph Campbell who took a huge pile of books to a shack in Woodstock and spent four years reading them.
If you want a history book that looks at the people who often go against the flow and you almost certainly haven’t heard of, then this is a good place to start.
Phenomenal. I had a very good laugh reading the book. Apart from the obvious fact that the people here are weirdos and wackos, the authors described them in such witty and entertaining ways.
This was fun, probably more of a bog book than anything but I'm happy to read that sort of thing through. My main criticism would be that the lives it focuses on are mostly white and American or European but it does dig out some interesting women
This was a fun book with brief bios written in a fun and snappy way. It was entertaining to learn about such bold and mischievous people who otherwise ended up under the radar. I enjoyed learning about a person or two with my morning coffee :)
A delightful miscellany of people who thought (and frequently acted) outside the box and influenced the modern world to a greater or lesser degree, for good or ill. Some would make interesting dinner guests and others I wouldn't want to be within punching distance. It is the sort of book that devotees if QI or Radio 4's The Museum of Curiosity would love, and I might have given it a bit higher score if there weren't so many typos in it. Co-author/editor Jo Keeling may claim to be "a devotee to slow and thoughtful journalism" and "is proud to be part of a growing subculture of independent publishers" but a bit of old fashioned slow and accurate proof-reading wouldn't go amiss.
I was overjoyed to have won this book in a GoodReads giveaway, as the premise sounded amazing and it did not disappoint.
This book is the literary equivalent of sitting on the late bus, the one with all the nutters, drunks and outcasts, and they are all sitting next to you. But... you kind of like having them there, as it makes the journey more interesting.
The Odditorium contains a few pages each on a large number of eccentric characters, in a reference book sort of format. You will surely have heard of some of them, but perhaps not known the entirity of their history, and with a weird variety of people some of the biographies are more interesting than others. Each chapter ends with a "Seeker's Directory", with books and films and things to visit to find out more about each of the eccentrics. I frequently found myself going off on a tangent searching for more information, or books, wanting to know more than some of the all too brief entries provided (by which I mean, the length meant certain detail was omitted, rather than the entries were too short overall - they are a good length to get an overview, but the more interesting creatures you will want to find out more about).
Thoroughly enjoyable, entertaining and educational to boot.