Edward Lear (1812–1888) is best known today for his witty limericks and endearing nonsense verse. But the celebrated author of The Owl and the Pussy-Cat also created some of the most stunning paintings of birds and mammals during an age when many species were just being discovered and brought to private menageries and zoos throughout Europe. The Natural History of Edward Lear brings together more than 200 of Lear’s strikingly beautiful illustrations of animals, plants, and landscapes. Robert McCracken Peck sheds light on Lear’s astounding creativity, productivity, and success as an artist. He discusses Lear’s humour, extensive travels, and important place in the history of science, and shows how Lear influenced other artists from Beatrix Potter and Maurice Sendak to James Prosek and Walton Ford.
With a foreword by David Attenborough, a new chapter discussing Lear’s interest in pets, and never-before-published illustrations by Lear, this new edition offers invaluable perspectives on a beloved writer who was also one of the greatest natural-history artists of all time.
Robert McCracken Peck, curator of art and artefacts and senior fellow of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, is a writer, naturalist, and historian who has travelled extensively in North and South America, Africa, Asia, and Europe. He has written numerous books on the subject of natural history, and has also written for newspapers and a wide range of popular and scholarly publications.
"[Peck] has discovered a great deal that is new and which will fascinate anyone with a love for Lear and for fine natural history illustration."
– from the foreword by David Attenborough
"Beautifully produced."
– Michael Dirda, Washington Post
"[An] exquisite retrospective of Edward Lear."
– Laurence A. Marschall, Natural History
"This beautiful, richly illustrated and carefully researched volume by Robert McCracken Peck is to be warmly welcomed. It is a very useful contribution to the furtherance of our understanding of this extraordinary man."
– Adam Kendon, Times Literary Supplement
"A book full of delights, discoveries and surprises [...] Peck has established Lear's leading place in the history of bird and mammal illustration and art."
– Christine Jackson, Archives of Natural History
"One of the delights of Peck's authoritative and sharp-eyed study is that, while it fleshes out Lear's early career in unprecedented detail, it also demonstrates how much natural history Lear carried with him into his later work both as a landscape painter and as a writer of nonsense."
– James Williams, The Art Newspaper