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This month I have two books coming out-The Penguin Book of Gaslight Crime, which has just appeared, as you can tell from this blog page; and In the Womb: Animals, which National Geographic Books will publish later this month. The latter, my fourth book about nature, prompted a colleague, an editor, to email and ask me about my interest in science and technology. He phrased it that way: "science and technology," as if they were linked, like Laurel and Hardy or time and tide.
So I had to explain that although I often write about nature and the natural sciences I really have very little interest in or knowledge about technology. Not that I'm a Luddite; I'm writing this on a laptop from my deck and sending it via email where it will appear on the Web. I use digital cameras almost exclusively nowadays. Clearly I don't hide out in a cabin in the backwoods of Manitoba and commune with moose. But I can't stir up much interest in technology in itself. In fact, after years of interest in photography in the 1980s and 90s, I got bored with the paraphernalia until digital came along and its immediate gratification restored my waning interest in, to use the origin of the word photography, "drawing with light."







