"Moo!"
No reviews! Inconceivable! for this is a bounteous book about our bovine buddies. Pretty much everything you would want about an animal is featured in this volume, part of a multi-volume series, at least one of which (The Chicken) is written by the same author, and Rutland knows her shit from her cowshit, be sure.
An impressive and accessible first section goes through the cow's prehistoric ancestors, genetic lineage and recently extinct and extant cousins. The main focus of the work is on Bos taurus tauru, the cow you know and love, but Bos taurus indicus (they have those weird humps) gets fair play, too. There are great sections on cow anatomy, behavior, sex, and, of course, their interactions with humans. In fact, this last bit takes up the bulk of the narrative since there are hardly any wild cows anymore. Rutland goes through the history of cow/human interactions, how we milk them, eat them, and wear them. Several sections of common sense humaneness and environmental stuff makes the fact that we slaughter these guys wholesale a little more palatable, but not by much. If burgers weren't so delicious...