Enfilade

New Book | Beautiful Shells

Posted in books by Editor on March 29, 2025

From Bodleian Library Publishing, with distribution by The University of Chicago Press:

Mark Carnall, Beautiful Shells: George Perry’s Conchology (Oxford: Bodleian Library, 2025), 192 pages, ISBN: 978-1851246168, £25 / $40.

In 1811, architect, stone mason, and shell obsessive George Perry published his lavishly illustrated volume, Conchology or the Natural History of Shells. The work featured 348 beautifully illustrated mollusk shells with descriptions of species, many of which were new to science. Despite the effort that went into producing it—and at a time when conchophilia, or shell fancying, was at its height—Perry’s Conchology disappeared from scientific literature, after being suppressed by the leading conchologists of the day and then cruelly mocked for decades after. Beautiful Shells reproduces the stunning, exquisitely drawn, and sometimes fanciful shell illustrations from this extraordinary forgotten volume. Following an introduction exploring our fascination with shells and their impact on human history, culture, and science, each of the sixty-one color illustrations is included alongside a description of notable shells and what is known of the mysterious organisms that make them. From the common limpet and razor clam to the valuable cowry and spectacular divine conch, the wide range of featured shells form a treasure trove of natural beauty from our oceans and shores.

Mark Carnall is collections manager of human remains and non-insect invertebrate collections at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.

c o n t e n t s

Introduction
The Shells

Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Picture Credits
Index

New Book | Catesby’s Natural History

Posted in books by Editor on March 29, 2025

From Bodleian Library Publishing, with distribution by The University of Chicago Press:

Stephen Harris, Catesby’s Natural History (Oxford: Bodleian Library, 2024), 304 pages, ISBN: ‎978-1851246397, £50 / $75.

A beautiful reproduction of naturalist Mark Catesby’s flora and fauna illustrations of North America and the Caribbean.

Mark Catesby was an eighteenth-century naturalist and artist whose work on the natural history of North America and the Caribbean still resonates today. During several perilous trips, Catesby collected specimens and made extensive observations in the field, gathering material that would eventually become The Natural History of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands, which featured 220 elaborate, distinctive hand-colored illustrations.

With their striking combinations of animals and plants paired together with the first-hand observations he made, Catesby’s stunning illustrations were widely appreciated in their time and catalyzed interest in the natural history of Colonial America. Ultimately, his work was established as a key reference for the scientific understanding of natural history. As an artist, Catesby meticulously recorded the environment, sifting fact from fiction about the lives of the plants and animals he observed. As a collector, he introduced many living plants to Britain, thereby changing European gardens forever. Catesby’s Natural History reproduces all the original plates and shows how Catesby’s practical field experience shaped his work in all areas. Whether through the now-extinct species he recorded or the cultural changes he witnessed, his research continues to be relevant, demonstrating the vulnerability and fragility of the natural world.

Stephen A. Harris is Druce Curator of Oxford University Herbaria.

c o n t e n t s

1  Natural History in the Thirteen Colonies
2  Who was Mark Catesby?
3  On Habitats and Uses
4  On Indigenous and Enslaved Peoples
5  On Collection and Cultivation
6  On Illustrations
7  On Publishing the Natural History
8  Legacy