Reviews

Beyond Words: What Animals Think and Feel by Carl Safina

gjmaupin's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful informative inspiring sad medium-paced

5.0

dreiac's review

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4.0

An enlightening insight into the lives of elephants, wolves and killer wales. And… humans’ greed, ignorance and supremacy.

devonforest's review

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5.0

I’ve been wanting to read this for a while since a friend recommended it to me. And he was right, this book was great! Just reading about all the amazing stories about how animals interact with each other. Animals are truly fascinating and I always enjoy reading and learning about what we are constantly learning from and about them.

bluepazookie's review against another edition

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Really dry and audio hard to listen to, even though read by the author (who you’d think would be more enthusiastic about his work). Other reviews on the misinformation about wolves later in the book also contributed to DNF. 

rebel_rocketman's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful informative inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

4.0

namestaken's review

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2.0

I enjoyed a lot of the first third of the book. His information on elephants was very interesting and informative, however, it all fell apart when he moved into wolves. His evidence was flimsy and, seemingly, influenced heavily by his emotional ties to his dogs. His disdain for researchers was very off-putting.

Ultimately, most of the book felt like a repetition of the first few points. Additional evidence of his ideas didn't help to convince, especially when his anger towards researchers became evident. I wish he'd have ended the book with elephants, the rest felt like padding for a page count.

livres_de_bloss's review against another edition

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5.0

Fantastic.

This will change the way you see and perceive animals in the natural world.

pwtjax's review

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5.0

This book should be required reading for all humans. Very moving and profound.

uditnair24's review

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4.0

The book takes a perspective of a world outside us- a world in which humans are not the measure of all things. The fundamental premise of the book is that all creatures on earth have shared experiences because we all have got the same basic brain. The argument presented here is appropriately more understandable for social animals. The book makes the case broadly through three studies. The first part of book deals with a particular family of African elephants, followed by a wolf population of yellow stone and finally it deals with killer whales and other cetaceans. Most of the claims made by author are backed by ethograms and natural observations in the wild. I still believe that in many places it felt like little over the board but probably it's because of my academic training as biologist which makes me wired to neutrality even when it might not be the case.

The author rightly says that we can safely say that what elephants or wolves or whales are saying and understanding is more sophisticated than is our understanding of what these creatures are saying. Humans desperately need to believe that we are not just unique- as all species are - but we are so very special, that we are resplendent,transendent, divinely inspired,weightlessly imbued with eternal souls. Anything less induces dread and panic. But the reality is that we are just one amongst many magnificent creatures who walk on this earth.


Humans have overestimated their own capabilities and have grossly underestimated the intelligence and sensitivity of other animals. One might think that intelligence or cognition or consciousness are abstract concepts for animals but they are as abstract as we choose to define it. At the end of the day the basic wiring of the brain and thus the biological system presents a continuity across the animal kingdom.

terrypaulpearce's review

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2.0

A shame, this one. It was at its best when it commented on the animals' lives and left you to draw your own conclusions about their inner lives. But far too often it rambled far, far off course. A good editor could've cut half, and the folksy style didn't resonate with me at all. For somebody who repeatedly claimed to be following the science, it strayed dangerously close to woo a few times, and argument after argument boiled down to suppositions and assumptions.

It's not really a very scientific book at all, which left travelogue and experience as to what it should have focused on -- and again, when it did that well, it had some great passages on the lives of wolves and elephants... just enough to get me to finish it.

If you're interested in the broad aim of this book but want something much better written, I strongly recommend Frans de Waal's 'Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?'.