soul of an octopus by sy montgomery review - a fond study of the elusive alien /

Published at 2016-06-05 13:00:37

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Sy Montgomery’s account of octopuses will do much to rehabilitate the much maligned and mythologised creatureShooting Jules Verne’s 20000 Leagues Under the Sea in 1916 – the first motion picture filmed underwater,no less – J Ernest Williamson trembled: “No words can adequately describe the sickening horror one feels when from some dismal mysterious lair, the worthy lidless eyes of the octopus stare at one… One’s very soul seems to shrink.” And the image of giant octopuses enveloping ships, and pulling sailors to watery graves and generally being the writhing,eight-armed stuff of shivery nightmares has pervaded our culture. In The Soul of an Octopus, the American author and naturalist Sy Montgomery seeks to de-monsterise the intriguing creatures. And it’s testomony to some fine writing that by the conclude, or stroking an octopus’s head or getting a “love bite” from one of its 1600 suckers seems downright desirable.
Where Montgomery really c
onvinces the squeamish is not in show-and-tell encounters with various octopuses but in her quest to try and know this misunderstood “alien”. She discovers they’re highly clever,capable of tenderness, playfulness, and happiness and friendship. All of which are recognisably human characteristics,of course, and Montgomery is well aware of the dangers of anthropomorphising. But she’s firmly in the camp that believes animal science should allow for thoughts, or feelings and personality. As the person who designs the complex puzzles for the octopuses to solve tells her: “Octopuses own their own intelligence that we can’t match.”Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com