Never Home Alone: From Microbes to Millipedes, Camel Crickets, and Honeybees, the Natural History of Where We Live
Never Home Alone: From Microbes to Millipedes, Camel Crickets, and Honeybees, the Natural History of Where We Live book cover

Never Home Alone: From Microbes to Millipedes, Camel Crickets, and Honeybees, the Natural History of Where We Live

Paperback – Illustrated, October 1, 2019

Price
$8.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
336
Publisher
Basic Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1541618305
Dimensions
5.45 x 1.05 x 8.2 inches
Weight
11.2 ounces

Description

"Utterly fascinating... a spirited romp through the vast diversity that inhabits our daily lives and how we've changed our ecosystems, often for the worse."― Washington Post "In his fascinating new book...Mr. Dunn brings a scientist's sensibility to our domestic jungle by exploring the paradox of the modern home.... Mr. Dunn also gracefully explains, without getting bogged down in details, the technology that has allowed scientists during the past decade or so to sequence the DNA of millions of previously unknown microbes, making his book an excellent layperson's guide to cutting-edge research."― Wall Street Journal "Chatty, informative... it's hard not to be occasionally charmed by [Dunn's] prose, as when he catalogs the arthropods with whom we share our homes... And it's hard not to share, at least a little, his awe at their diversity, even in a single household."― New York Times Book Review "[A] fascinating and illuminating book... Dunn and his colleagues have used the concepts and techniques of community ecology to tease apart the functioning of a mostly ignored ecosystem: the human home. Their research enriches our understanding of ecosystem function, and--more grippingly--gives us insight into how our interactions with living things in the domestic habitat affect our health and well-being."― Nature " Never Home Alone is a thumping good book that raises alarm and offers reassurance in roughly equal measure. And it is funny... What makes [it] so compelling is a sense of wonder and delight that encompasses all sorts of creatures and all sorts of science."― Los Angeles Review of Books "Intriguing... Seen through Dunn's curious eyes, a house becomes not just a set of rooms, but a series of habitats to be explored. His writing and research lend a new appreciation of what many of us consider pests."― Science News "If you're an insectophobe looking for a thrill, you'll love Rob Dunn's Never Home Alone , which details the thousands of species of insects and microbes that live in and around your home."― Bustle "If you could somehow infuse the curiosity of a 6-year-old with Ph.D.-level intelligence, imagine what wondrous things you could learn. Or why not make it easier on yourself, and just read Never Home Alone . Yes, that delightful, open-minded gee-whiz is exactly what makes this book so enjoyable. Surprisingly, it's doubly so for a germophobe, an arachnophobe, or anyone who can't stand the idea of intruders. Dunn has a way of brushing fears aside so he can tell you about something that's too cool to miss, or a fact that makes you say, 'Wow!'... Science-minded readers will love this book. It's filled with things you'll want to know for the health of it. Really, for anyone who's alive, Never Home Alone is a book to share with a few million of your newest best friends."― Terri Schlichenmeyer, The Bookworm Sez columnist "If you enjoyed I Contain Multitudes , this book should be next on your reading list. Just like Ed Yong shows readers the fascinating microorganisms all around us, Dunn opens our eyes to the minute creatures that live within the confinement of our own homes... a fascinating and entertaining read."― Read More Science Finalist, 2020 Smart Book of the Year award― Jagiellonian University "Wonderful."― TreeHugger "Crammed full of eensy-weensy tales of wonder from the insect world.... On virtually every page, readers learn about these marvels and their potential applications so the benefit of humans, all of it written with the bounce and insight of a true believer...[a] hugely important book."― Open Letters Review "A robust, scientific defence for both microbial life and for larger creatures too often exterminated simply because they've invaded our space. While data from copious end notes support staid scientific facts from strictly controlled lab tests, an engaging writing style enlivens narratives such as those about microbes in shower heads and beetles on windowsills, transforming Dunn's latest work into a profound understanding of how all living things help in constructing and maintaining our planet's complex web of life."― Winnipeg Free Press "A good book about niche science, which deserves to be widely read."― Sunday Times (UK) "Over a number of years, Rob Dunn, a U.S. biologist and ecologist and his team, surveyed the species to be found in 1,000 houses from around the world. The results, revealed in this remarkable, jaw-dropping, occasionally unappetising book, are astonishing."― Daily Mail (UK) "A lively compendium of hard science, anecdote, history, and personal memoir.... Something of a scientific raconteur, Dunn tells his story of the macro and micro biome of our homes in a colloquial...stye that makes the heavy science go down easy."― Shelf Awareness "[An] intriguing and captivating scientific detective story...Dunn eloquently observes that many species we find in our homes have value to us."― BookPage "Scintillating... In a time of clear-eyed assessment of the environment, Dunn is a voice of reason who should be heartily welcomed."― Booklist, starred review "Of course we must chlorinate our water, wash our hands, get vaccinated, and so on, Dunn argues persuasively and entertainingly. But we also need to relax and cultivate biodiversity for the good of all life on Earth."― Kirkus Reviews "An entertaining tour of the biodiversity found in one of the fastest-growing biomes: indoors... This book will be enjoyed by biologists but also general readers with an appreciation for nature."― Library Journal "Delightfully entertaining and scientifically enlightening... [Dunn] makes a compelling case for the value of biodiversity, while also conveying the excitement of scientific investigation, demonstrating that important discoveries can be made very close to home."― Publishers Weekly "Easy to read and accessible... Recommended."― CHOICE " Never Home Alone is a superb guide to your own house--a place that is home to hundreds of thousands of species--a far richer habitat than even the largest backyard. This riveting and surprising book is one of those rare volumes that will make you gasp out loud on almost every page, and phone your friends to report stunning fact after stunning fact. Thank you, Rob Dunn: I love our house even more now I understand it shelters multitudes of fascinating (and mostly benevolent) living creatures."― Sy Montgomery, author of The Soul of an Octopus "If you're looking for a guide to the teeming, tiny, tenacious creatures that share our bodies, our homes--and may one day well inherit our planet--you could not do better than this fascinating book by Rob Dunn."― Deborah Blum, author of The Poisoner's Handbook "Rob Dunn is a brilliant explorer of the strange, mostly uncharted biology of our homes and bodies. This must-read book is full of astonishing stories, skillfully told."― David George Haskell, author of The Songs of Trees and The Forest Unseen "If you truly want to know yourself and be amazed, get to know your ecology. This charming book shows how important and fun it is to discover the astonishing world of marvelous and unseen creatures around us. You'll never take a shower again in the same way!"― Daniel E. Lieberman, author of The Story of the Human Body "In Never Home Alone , Rob Dunn reveals the unseen wilderness that surrounds us every day. This book will change the way you think about everything from dust to spiders to showerheads--a fascinating and highly recommended read!"― Thor Hanson, author of Buzz, Feathers, and The Triumph of Seeds "A Brooklyn couple visiting the West told me, 'We don't do nature.' Today, I'm sending them a copy of Rob Dunn's Never Home Alone , with this note: 'Nature made you, so roll in the dirt, open the windows, get a dog. Change your showerhead, but don't kill your spiders. And read this terrific book at once.'"― Dan Flores, author of Coyote America Rob Dunn is a professor in the Department of Applied Ecology at North Carolina State University and in the Natural History Museum of Denmark at the University of Copenhagen. He is the author of The Man Who Touched His Own Heart, The Wild Life of Our Bodies , and Every Living Thing , and his magazine work is published widely, including in National Geographic, Natural History, New Scientist, Scientific American , and Smithsonian . He has a PhD from the University of Connecticut and was a Fulbright Fellow. He lives in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Features & Highlights

  • A natural history of the wilderness in our homes, from the microbes in our showers to the crickets in our basements
  • Even when the floors are sparkling clean and the house seems silent, our domestic domain is wild beyond imagination. In
  • Never Home Alone
  • , biologist Rob Dunn introduces us to the nearly 200,000 species living with us in our own homes, from the Egyptian meal moths in our cupboards and camel crickets in our basements to the
  • lactobacillus
  • lounging on our kitchen counters. You are not alone. Yet, as we obsess over sterilizing our homes and separating our spaces from nature, we are unwittingly cultivating an entirely new playground for evolution. These changes are reshaping the organisms that live with us -- prompting some to become more dangerous, while undermining those species that benefit our bodies or help us keep more threatening organisms at bay. No one who reads this engrossing, revelatory book will look at their homes in the same way again.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(211)
★★★★
25%
(88)
★★★
15%
(53)
★★
7%
(25)
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Super Cool and Fascinating Book

I have been reading this out loud to my son's, ages 9 and 11. We are loving it! I'm learning so much about the biome of our home, all things gross, interesting, exciting, appalling, and intriguing. Did you know that a heat-lovimg bacteria once only found in hot springs now lives in people's water heaters? Or that cave crickets have evolved to live exclusively in your basement? Or that the yeast we use take beer and wine came from the guts of wasps? Do you know how many types of creepy crawlies coexist with humans in our homes? Because I didn't know any of these things until I read this book. My kids and I have been inspired to be curious, to observe, and to keep track of our home ecosystem we never knew existed thanks to this book. 5 stars from this mom of future scientists!
4 people found this helpful
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Shines Light on a Hidden World

This book exposes the reader to ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and their biophysical environment. For me, beginning with van Leeuwenhoek and his microscope was appropriate. As a teen, I had tested my new microscope by squeezing a drop of puddle water onto a slide. The results were amazing: under my lens was an invisible world of darting, squirming, recoiling life.

Author Rob Dunn, a Professor of Applied Ecology, focuses on that life living with us. His team initially conducts an inventory of homes in Raleigh NC, employing a method called DNA Sequencing to identify bacteria types. The team finds different kinds of bacteria everywhere: we can’t get rid of them, and wouldn’t want to because most are beneficial.

The author’s studies and research continue, to examine mold in drywall, cultivation of yeasts, and baking contests where microbes on the bakers’ hands affect the flavor of their breads.

Dunn draws heavily from first-hand experience with his team’s work and his collaborations, which add strength to his findings. But some conclusions are based on thinly supported research such as a single student’s thesis. Sometimes, the author substitutes supposition for stating a fact.

Dunn addresses important ecological issues. He emphasizes the worrisome pace of bacteria in developing resistance to medicines faster than we are producing new treatments. He expresses concern about the use of chemicals that indiscriminately kill both harmful and harmless life. And he describes the application of “exploitive competition,” a strategy of using harmless organisms to outcompete and eliminate harmful ones.

Dunn strongly supports the benefits of biodiversity. He advises against attempting to create a near-sterile environment where we live, because developing a human response to “friendly” invaders stimulates our immune system to develop defenses against harmful ones.

The book suggests that this field is rife with study opportunities, but also thin in capable researchers and available funding. Discoveries such as Fleming’s penicillin were taken from Nature, and one gets a hint that more such discoveries are awaiting. But, the astronomical range of existing life forms presents a challenge in what to study. So, the field emphasizes selection of useful study areas.

This interesting book offers much to think about, but at times it seems over the top. While it elaborates on microscopic visitors in the International Space Station and speculates about fungi on Mars, other subjects such as beetles keeping ants as pets, or parasites intentionally causing schizophrenia in humans, seem too outré. Further at times, the reader must adapt to Dunn’s unexpectedly casual and humorous writing style.

I encountered a formatting problem seen in other books: on each right-side page in the book’s body, the header contains a CHAPTER TITLE. But in the Notes section in back, notes are organized by CHAPTER NUMBER. As a result, a reader looking up a note must first refer to the Table of Contents to reference chapter titles to chapter numbers.
4 people found this helpful
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Fascinating Information That Your Friends Won't Want to Hear About

I learned a lot from this book, including that bottled water contains microorganisms just as tap water does and that shower heads are full of bacteria. My only problem with this book was that when I excitedly tried to tell other people what I learned in it, they shut me down because they didn't want to know about all the creepy-crawlies that surround us. Have you ever wondered, though, what happens when the mosquito that gives a dog heartworm bites a human? This book will tell you!
2 people found this helpful
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Our micro companions

This book wakes me up to those invisible companions that live with us 24/7! Now I understand why sometimes I get infection despite being very clean. I have essentially washed away the good bugs that are protecting me and invited the bad ones to cause infection! At the same time, learning how microorganisms circulate around us specially through pets and the potential diseases these pets can bring to us make me wonder if some illnesses suffered by some people may have been caused by their own pets. Often the symptoms don't show till years later. It's worth reading. It wakes me up to our invisible companions, invited and uninvited ones.
2 people found this helpful
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Why your home microcosm is important

Rob Dunn has created a fascinating look at the creatures in our homes, both microscopic and macroscopic. He gives an understandable, easy to read description of some of science's newest techniques for delving into the invisible world around us. He takes us down the path of the double edged sword of trying to kill off parts of the nature around us for our convenience vs an awareness of the need for biodiversity. Don't be afraid to dive into this book, though. Dunn makes it a delightful and amusing read. Our book club chose this for last month's gathering and everyone loved it.
1 people found this helpful
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Extremely interesting book

I read this as a member of the Arboritium book club. It was wonderful! There is so much to learn with so many unique perspectives
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Good merchandise!

Extremely clean, as advertised.
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Your drywall isn't as dry as you think...

and your home is serving as a home to countless fungi, bacteria and tiny invertebrates that have found intricate ways to evolved independently in different regions of different areas. These are just some of the truly fascinating insights provided by Dr. Dunn. Illustrating personal anecdotes, current research and cross-country comparisons that are helped out by citizen scientists, Dunn once again helps to highlight an area that isn't focused on much in a traditional curriculum or in current science publications and does a masterful job of piquing interest in obscure organisms such as mycobacterium and many more. Highly recommend to anyone as he has done another great job with this book, just like he has for most of his previous books as well!