Entertainment Complex 2025/26
Here's what I plan on reading and watching in vague order the rest of the summer and into the fall and winter.

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Entertainment Complex 2025/26
Here's what I plan on reading and watching in vague order the rest of the summer and into the fall and winter.
Spineless
By Juli Berwald.
Design by Gretchen Achilles.
Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Backbone (2018), Juli Berwald
Black Inc
Jellyfish have been swimming in our oceans for over half a billion years, longer than any other animal that lives on the planet. Their sting is the fastest known motion in the animal kingdom, their venom so toxic it can kill a human in three minutes. Made of roughly 95 percent water, some jellies are barely perceptible virtuosos of disguise, while others’ luminescent glow has revolutionized biotechnology. Yet until recently, jellyfish were largely ignored by science, and they remain among the most poorly understood of ocean dwellers.
Over a decade ago, ocean scientist Juli Berwald left her career to raise a family in landlocked Austin, Texas, but jellyfish drew her back to the sea. Driven by questions about how overfishing, coastal development, and climate change were contributing to a jellyfish population explosion that has caused millions of dollars of damage, Juli embarked on a scientific odyssey that took her across the globe. She met the biologists who devote their careers to jellies, hitched rides on Japanese fishing boats to see giant jellyfish in the wild, raised jellyfish in her dining room, and throughout it all marveled at the complexity of these alluring and ominous biological wonders.
Gracefully blending personal memoir with crystal-clear distillations of science, Spineless is the story of how Juli learned to navigate and ultimately embrace her ambition, her curiosity, and her passion for the natural world. She discovers that jellyfish science is a call to realize our collective responsibility for the planet we share.
For the friend who would like a Sci, hold the Fi.
On Improbable Destinies by Jonathan B. Losos: “Packed with stories of capturing lizards in the field, Improbable Destinies explores how we think evolutionary changes happen in populations, from mice to microbes to sticklebacks. Get this for the backyard biologist in your life.”
On Spineless by Juli Berwald: “There is perhaps no more soothing sight than the illuminated jellyfish tanks in an aquarium. In Spineless Juli Berwald brings us inside, unraveling a memoir about the scientific exploration of these strange, wonderful creatures.”
Happy gifting!!!
Currently reading this book about jellyfish. Got myself some sticky notes to make notes on too! It's pretty cool so far.
... Maybe jellyfish came to be in a time when creatures absorbed what they needed from the world around them and then recycled it. Maybe the time of the jellyfish’s origin was an era before hunting, before aggression, before violence. Maybe when we think of prehistoric times, we should recall not a fierce place where dinosaurs stalked the Earth, but a time before that, a time of peace.
...
So maybe, when we look at jellyfish, what we see is a reminder of our deepest origins. Perhaps jellyfish strike an unconscious nerve, far below what we are still certain we know, of a past before violence, before consumption, before aggression. Perhaps jellyfish are living ghosts of a kinder past, a ghost from our true garden of Eden.
-- From Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Spine, by Juli Berwald
History teaches that using other organisms to rein in invasive species is like performing surgery on the ecosystem. The introduced animal must excise only the creature that's a pest, no other. It doesn't sound easy, and it isn't. We got it right when we introduced wasps to kill off the mealybug that was destroying cassava crops throughout Africa. The lives of millions of people who depend on cassava for food were saved. We got it wrong when we introduced the mongoose into Hawaii to rid it of rats. The small fox-faced carnivore decimated native bird populations, which have never recovered.
from Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Spine, by Juli Berwald
Life on the Rocks: Building a Future for Coral Reefs
By Juli Berwald.