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Wayne Barlowe
An Ishtarian from Fire Time by Poul Anderson, as illustrated by Wayne Barlow
Would You Fuck An Ishtarian?
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Wildlife of Hell - Beast by Wayne Barlow
The Last Man On Earth by Wayne Barlow // Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel // A Quiet Place: Part Two dir. John Krasinski // Zone One by Colson Whitehead // Wanderer above the Sea of Fog by Caspar David Friedrich
Wayne Barlow
Wayne Barlow, 1980
What do you think of Serina: A Natural History of the World of Birds? It's about canaries
Oooh, this combines two of my favorite things: namely speculative evolution & birds! I'm surprised I've never stumbled on this site before. Thank you for pointing it out!
It's quite charming, even ingenious that someone would imagine an ecosystem so reliant on canaries. I adore their bizarre descendants. I am reminded of Dougal Dixon's After Man, where Dixon traces animal evolution in a world without humans. Like in Serina (notably with the Tentacle birds), the birds in Dixon's book evolve specialized beaks. The flower-faced potoo is a really neat example! It attracts insects through mimicry.
The illustrations on Serina are a nice accompaniment for the text. I especially like that they begin resembling a bestiary. Speculative evolution really flourishes as a genre with visuals. It's fascinating to watch the canary morph to fill vacant niches. The Pygmy Rainbora is precious. I'm also quite fond of quadrupedal species, like the Bumblebear :)
You might already be familiar with these speculative evolution books, anon, but I feel compelled to list them!
After Man by Dougal Dixon - Already mentioned this one, but it is probably the closest to Serina that I have encountered. Dixon's illustrations are also truly lovely, made with ink, graphite, and watercolor.
Expedition by Wayne Barlowe - Barlowe follows an illustrator who travels to the fictional planet Darwin IV to record alien life. I'm lucky enough to have a physical copy of this one. It is filled with gorgeous oil paintings:
There is also a CGI adaptation on Youtube from 9 years ago. It is a little outdated visually, but still fascinating!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVjYtZydMuo
Barlowe's Guide to Extraterrestrials - This is a xenobiological bestiary, where Barlowe illustrates aliens from popular sci-fi novels.
All Tomorrows by Nemo Ramjet - A dark but rich story about human evolution. Emphasis on cosmic horror, so not for the faint of heart.
I really wish I could find a copy of Dougal Dixon's The New Dinosaurs. A friend of mine also suggested Amarant: The flora and fauna of Atlantis but I haven't picked it up yet.
Speculative evolution is such a neat genre!