"With amazing artwork on every page, Bainbridges book traces mans quest to classify animals and explain their similarities and differences in art ranging from sketches to painting to computer images." -- Marcus Schneck * PennLive * "...this book is highly recommended for general readers wanting a visual introduction to the classification of living species." * Booklist * "Thoroughly 'reader friendly' in organization and presentation, "How Zoologists Organize Things: The Art of Classification" will prove to be a unique and welcome addition to personal, professional, high school, community, college, and university library Contemporary Science collections in general, and zoology supplemental curriculum reading lists in particular." * Midwest Book Review * "While not classified as light reading, How Zoologists Organize Things by British author David Bainbridge is a fascinating lookat humanitys struggle to understand the animals with which we share theworld." * WhiteTail Magazine * This book is so much more than an explanation of the title; it is a visual feast. Every page has carefully chosen and beautifully reproduced illustrations. The author has selected from a huge range of zoological material and has included medieval bestiaries from as early as the 1200s, to present-day genetics diagrams which are in themselves a visual delight, to subtly coloured electron microscope photographs of chromosomes. The text is well written and concise, giving a clear interpretation of the illustrations and enough background to enable one to understand something of the many zoologists who created numerous ways to understand the natural world of animals. This is a worthwhile account covering the work of many of the scientists, from a Western perspective, who have over the ages attempted to illustrate the order in Earths animal biodiversity. 5 stars -- Ray Heaton * The Fortean Times *