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Slither

How Nature’s Most Maligned Creatures Illuminate Our World

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By Stephen S. Hall

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A spellbinding scientific and cultural study of snakes, the fascination and fear they inspire, and how surprising new science is indelibly changing our perception of these stunning and frightening creatures.

For millennia, depictions of snakes as alternatively beautiful and menacing creatures have appeared in religious texts, mythology, poetry, and beyond. From the foundational deities of ancient Egypt to the reactions of squeamish schoolchildren today, it is a historically commonplace belief that snakes are devious, dangerous, and even evil. But where there is hatred and fear, there is also fascination and reverence. How is it that creatures so despised and sinister, so foreign of movement and ostensibly devoid of sociality and emotion, have fired the imaginations of poets, prophets, and painters across time and cultures? 

In SLITHER, science writer Stephen S. Hall presents a naturalistic, cultural, ecological, and scientific meditation on these loathed yet magnetic creatures. In each chapter, he explores a biological aspect of The Snake, such as their cold blooded metabolism and venomous nature, alongside their mythology, artistic depictions, and cultural veneration. In doing so, he explores not only what neurologically triggers our wary fascination with these limbless creatures, but also how the current generation of snake scientists is using cutting-edge technologies to discover new truths about these evolutionarily ancient creatures—truths that may ultimately affect and enhance human health.

  • "The story of snakes and people is long and sinuous, rich with beauty and fascination, looping by way of Ophites, D.H. Lawrence, the mathematics of slithering, and Edward O. Wilson. Stephen Hall’s telling of that story is wise and wondrous. Both I and the beloved python with whom I share my office, Boots, applaud it wholeheartedly."
     
    David Quammen, award-winning author of Breathless
  • "SLITHER is Ssssssimply Ssssssssssssssssplendid! If you are not already a fan of stunning, sinuous, super-powered serpents, this glorious book will help you come to your senses!  Stephen Hall's deep and tender love for snakes radiates from every incandescent page. Prepare to be enchanted."
    Sy Montgomery, bestselling author
  • PRAISE FOR INVISIBLE FRONTIERS

    "An important and pioneering book."
    New York Times Book Review
  • "A splendid piece of science writing."
    Washington Post Book World
  • PRAISE FOR WISDOM

    “A comprehensive and thought-provoking book that examines the difficult topic of wisdom in a fair—even wise—manner.”
    Science News
  • “Stephen Hall is not just a terrific science writer, he’s a terrific writer, period.”
    Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma
  • “Utterly engaging. . . . Hall’s work as a translator and intermediary between the humanities and the hard neurosciences is in itself a feat of extraordinary mental balance and understanding.”
    The Post and Courier

On Sale
Apr 22, 2025
Page Count
416 pages
ISBN-13
9781538741337

Stephen S. Hall

About the Author

Stephen S. Hall has been reporting and writing about the intersection of science and society for more than 40 years. In addition to numerous cover stories in the New York Times Magazine, where he also served as a Story Editor and Contributing Writer, his work has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, National Geographic, New York Magazine, Wired, Science, Nature, Scientific American, Discover, The Sciences, Hip-pocrates, Smithsonian, and more. He is also the author of six critically acclaimed non-fiction books about contemporary science. Among other honors, he has received the Walter Sullivan Award for Excellence in Science Journalism from the American Geophysical Union (2011); the Best Magazine Story of the Year from the American Association for the Advancement of Science-Kavli Foundation in 2017; and an honorary doctorate from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in 2023. He also received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2012.

Since 2007 Hall has served as an adjunct professor of journalism at New York University, where he taught a core-curriculum graduate-school seminar in science writing at NYU’s Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program (SHERP) for ten years. He previously taught graduate seminars in science writing and explanatory journalism at Columbia University. Since 2009, he has also conducted hundreds of Science Communication Workshop sessions for scientists and doctors at NYU, Rockefeller University, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.


 

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