The Barking Tree Frog
and Other Curious Tales |
| Diane Casto Tennant |
| 232 pages, 5 1/2 x 81/2 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2841-8 $27.95 |
| August 2009 |
 |
Here’s something that doesn’t happen every millennium:
Roughly 35 million years ago, a stray meteorite dropped out of
the sky over Virginia and left an impact that helped shape one
of the continent’s most distinctive coastlines. This scene
of cataclysmic violence now lies beneath the calm waters of Chesapeake
Bay. The occurrence of this prehistoric event only recently came
to light, and the consequences of that impact will stretch far
past our lifetimes. As Diane Casto Tennant makes clear in her
new book, it wasn’t the last interesting thing to happen
in these parts.
Selected from Tennant’s widely admired writing for the
Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, these stories reveal the rich
natural history Virginia had compiled long before the first human
set eyes on itas well as the fascinating phenomena that
still surround us.
Her search for stories takes the author from dinosaur footprints
along the Rappahannock to the best-preserved insect fossils on
earth. On the way, she encounters a cast of characters that includes
shark fishermen, math geniuses, wolf callers, and a birder with
extraordinary eyesight. She speaks with a man who can read the
minds of horses and introduces us to a very special Jamestown
skeleton that could help solve a 400-year-old mystery.
Tennant also explores those other inhabitants of the mid-Atlantic,
looking to animals for miraculous stories of survival and adaptation.
We witness the difficult life of Sea Turtle No. 62, whose journey
illustrates the hazards confronting its species. We consider what
it means to be the fastest dog in the world. We join a quest to
find a barking tree frog and glimpse the strange afterlife of
beached whales.
While the author doesn’t avoid the hard in the hard sciences,
these stories speak primarily to the wonder of science. For the
common reader, whose stores of scientific knowledge may not be
vast but whose curiosity is, the perfect guide has just arrived.
Diane Casto Tennant’s honors include
science writing awards from the American Institute of Physics and
the American Geophysical Union. She is a narrative writer for the
Norfolk Virginian-Pilot.