This week in The New York Times Book Review, David Quammen reviews Monte Reelâs âBetween Man and Beast,â the story of the 19th-century explorer Paul Du Chaillu, who returned from Africa with evidence that a creature of myth â" the gorilla â" actually existed. Mr. Quammen writes:
No one from the Western world, as far as we know, had laid eyes on a kangaroo until 1770. Emus, orangutans and Komodo dragons came as surprises. The earliest scientific description of a dinosaur, based on mystifying new fossils, appeared only in 1824. But the most provocative of zoological novelties was the gorilla, a Victorian sensation, for two reasons: because it was presented (falsely) as a menacing, aggressive behemoth and because it seemed, in delicious paradox, much too similar to humans for comfort. The gorillaâs very existence suggested â" at just the time Charles Darwin was also suggesting â" heretical ideas about the origin and nature of mankind.
On this weekâs podcast, Mr. Reel talks about âBetween Man and Beastâ; Leslie Kaufman has notes from the field; Ada Calhoun discusses Mike Piazzaâs memoir; and Gregory Cowles has best-seller news. Sam Tanenhaus is the host.