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About the Author

Juli Berwald received her PhD in ocean science from the University of Southern California. A science textbook writer and editor, she has written for a number of publications, including The New York Times, Nature, National Geographic, Discover. The Guardian, and Slate. She lives in Austin with her show more husband and their son and daughter. show less

Includes the name: Ph.D Juli Berwald

Works by Juli Berwald

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14 reviews
Every chapter of this book seemed filled with stuff that astonished me. I didn't realize how little I knew about jellyfish before! The author is, quite simply, a woman who became enthralled with jellyfish. She read about them, watched documentaries, traveled to visit scientists who studied them and fishermen who caught them. She kept some in a special tank in her living room, and several times ate jellyfish- once cooking it herself. She took her family on detours during vacations to visit show more beaches where jellyfish had been sighted. And more. The details are mind-boggling. Jellyfish have a very complex and curious life cycle- and one species at least, is known to reverse the process. The way they physically move through the water is intriguing- so different from how we do that it's hard to understand. They can be incredibly fragile- literally dissolving away once in open air- and yet jellyfish blooms- when certain populations suddenly reach staggering numbers- can dramatically change local oceanic ecosystems, causing fish numbers to crash. Then there's the jellyfish toxins- their sting can be mildly irritating, or deadly. Jellyfish stinging cells move faster than anything- even the mantis shrimp, whose strike is so fast it literally makes the water boil. I'm boggled. I was also blown away by the verve the author had to follow her growing passion- she had a job in a different field, an everyday family life with kids- yet sought out people and events revolving around jellyfish, even sitting down at conferences about them. There's a lot in here not only about the physiology and mystery of jellyfish (so much we still don't know), but also what jellyfish indicate about ocean conditions, which throws light on what we are doing to the ecosystem. It's a book I'm very glad to have read, which has fired my mind with so many questions and curiosity for more.

from the DogearDiary
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This book is more of the author's personal memoir than any type of science book about jellyfish. Berwald's enthusiasm for jellyfish is obvious and the writing style flows nicely. She includes some incredibly interesting information about the creatures, but there is simply too much personal "stuff" about her, her kids, her husband, her travel trips adn the people she meets to wade through. After a while the biographical pages became boring and wading through all the irrelevant "stuff" to get show more to the interesting jellyfish information became annoying.


If you are looking for actual science about jellyfish, try the wikipedia entry. If you like biography with some interesting jellyfish information, then you might like this book.
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The author takes us along as she pursues her passionate interest in jellyfish by traveling the world speaking to scientists, fishermen and other experts, searching for jellies in the wild, and doing everything from cooking them to attempting to keep them as pets. In the process, she talks about the biology of these animals, their interactions with humans, and their place, for good and ill, in the ocean's ecosystem, although it turns out that a lot of questions about all of these topics are show more still lacking answers.

The ecological message here is important, and the jellyfish themselves are very interesting. I did find that this book was a bit of a slow read for me in places, though, perhaps partly because some of the information could have been better organized and partly because the author's discussions about her own life were often much less interesting than the jellyfish facts, even if she does manage a fairly stirring few paragraphs tying environmental themes and her personal journey together at the end.
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½
I really didn't know much of anything about jellyfish, just bits and bobs. This book definitely gave me an education on this amazing animal. The only part about the book I have a complaint about is how the author kept throwing in personal details of her life, which is fine in small doses, like how the person became interested in the subject they're writing about, etc., but she writes about her relationship troubles and other irrelevant personal stories that, I think, did not add anything to show more the subject of jellyfish but more like a semi-biography. Not to be cold, but I really don't care about your personal life when it adds nothing to the subject, which is what I'm interested in reading about.

I know I just wrote a lot about what I didn't like, but overall the book is pretty interesting and I would recommend it.
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Works
5
Members
434
Popularity
#56,343
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
14
ISBNs
18

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