Miami Herald (Sunday)

‘Immense World’ a sweeping survey of animal senses

- BY HAMILTON CAIN Star Tribune

Six years ago, Ed Yong stunned and delighted readers and critics with his dazzling début, “I Contain Multitudes,” revealing, in granular detail, the invisible, indispensa­ble world of the microbiome. My review for the Star Tribune proclaimed that he “belongs to the highest tier of science journalist­s at work today.”

Those words proved prophetic (if I may pat myself on the back): “I Contain Multitudes” vaulted onto the New

York Times bestseller list, and in the intervenin­g years Yong’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic for the Atlantic won a

Pulitzer Prize and was named a finalist for a National Magazine Award.

Now he’s done it again, and then some. His sumptuous new work, “An Immense World,” is a sweeping survey of animal senses, how and why they mold us even as they remain elusive. One doesn’t pick up this book so much as fall into it.

Yong structures “An Immense World” around the German noun Umwelt, “the part of those surroundin­gs that an animal can sense and experience – its perceptual world.” Umwelt unfolds, memelike, throughout the narrative, as Yong touches on the familiar – sight, sound, pain, and so on – and expands into non-human realms, such as echolocati­on and magnetorec­eption, “the only sense without a known sensor” and a holy grail for sensory biologists.

He leans into the mysteries but follows a clear through line, amplifying the science. “A bat must constantly adjust its sonar” when it stalks prey.

“To even find a moth in the first place, it must scour wide expanses of open air,” he writes. “During this search phase, it makes calls that carry as far as possible – loud, long, infrequent pulses whose energy is concentrat­ed within a narrow frequency band. … The entire hunting sequence, from initial search to terminal buzz, might occur over a matter of seconds.”

From bat sonar to dog after the male hero of “Pride and Prejudice.”

Nature, then, is a costume drama, a multiverse, a profusion of wormholes: What goes into an ear may come out transforme­d. Yong moves beyond the known unknowns – just how does a mantis shrimp, with its complex eyes, see? Can mosquitoes taste body heat? – and toward unknown unknowns. Have we brushed against all the sense scapes or do more exist?

In its final act, “An Immense World” swells into philosophy and politics, underscori­ng the urgency of climate change. Yong’s book melds epic journeys with intimate reckonings, one of this year’s finest journalist­ic achievemen­ts.

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