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Ralph Steadman’s World of Endangered Animals

The legendary cartoonist highlights Earth’s most vulnerable species, using his lavish, eccentric style

The white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum) is in big trouble. They live in Namibia, Zimbabwe, Kenya and South Africa with two subspecies: the “near threatened” southern white rhinoceros and the northern white rhinoceros, which is “critically endangered” and has become extinct in the wild. The two remaining individuals live in captivity in Kenya. Poaching for its horn for the Asian market, as with the black rhino, has seen the rapid descent of the species into a dark void.

Excerpted from Critical Critters by Ralph Steadman and Ceri Levy. Copyright © Ralph Steadman and Ceri Levy, 2017. Published by Bloomsbury Wildlife, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing. Reprinted with permission. Artwork by Ralph Steadman.

After collaborating on two books showcasing extinct and endangered birds, legendary cartoonist Ralph Steadman and filmmaker Ceri Levy have paired up again to create this eccentric, wildly imaginative collection of illustrations of other critically endangered animals.

Steadman’s drawings are nonconformist, splotched with color and a delightful overlay of finger painting–like splashes and precise ink drawings. Levy's descriptions detail each creature’s environment and the threats to its survival. The depictions of insects—the little mother moth, the Greek red damsel, the monarch butterfly—are particularly lavish, and an eerie bleakness is infused in the portraits of the snow leopard and giant panda. Humorous correspondences between the two authors accompany the drawings, adding some lightheartedness to the heavy subject matter.


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Critical Critters
by Ralph Steadman and Ceri Levy
Bloomsbury Natural History, 2017

Andrea Gawrylewski is chief newsletter editor at Scientific American. She writes the daily Today in Science newsletter and oversees all other newsletters at the magazine. In addition, she manages all special collector's editions and in the past was the editor for Scientific American Mind, Scientific American Space & Physics and Scientific American Health & Medicine. Gawrylewski got her start in journalism at the Scientist magazine, where she was a features writer and editor for "hot" research papers in the life sciences. She spent more than six years in educational publishing, editing books for higher education in biology, environmental science and nutrition. She holds a master's degree in earth science and a master's degree in journalism, both from Columbia University, home of the Pulitzer Prize.

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