“Before the Nature Channel, before camera safaris, even before Audubon, the only way to discover the beasts of foreign lands was through illustrations. In her scholarly and sprightly Paper Zoo, historian of science Sleigh tracks pictures of animals from medieval bestiaries to early twentieth-century school posters. Along the way she uncovers some fascinating stories, like that of Maria Sybilla Merian, who traveled to Suriname in 1699 and experimented with trompe l’oeil, producing the ‘earliest masterpiece of coloured natural history.’ There are plenty of masterpieces here, from gorgeous illustrations of sea anemones and delightful black and white monkeys to ‘borderline animals’ (half-imaginary, half real) like a many-legged stick insect and a ‘Domesticated Female Orang Outang’ wearing a jaunty striped kerchief.”
— Ann Landi, Wall Street Journal
“Engaging.”
— Barbara J. King, Times Literary Supplement, on Sleigh's "Frog"
“Precise and witty.”
— American Scientist, on Sleigh's "Six Legs Better"
“Fascinating. . . . Provocative, complex.”
— Times Literary Supplement, on Sleigh's "Six Legs Better"
“Erudite and eloquent.”
— P. D. Smith, Guardian, on Sleigh's "Literature and Science"
“Stylish . . . and informative.”
— Times, on Sleigh's "Ant"
“Impressive. . . . Illuminating.”
— Independent, on Sleigh's "Ant"
“Pictures can be sources of knowledge. Without them, indeed, some studies would be difficult or impossible to pursue. How could you define and describe innumerable types of animals, birds, and insects using words alone? Sleigh, a historian of science, takes zoological illustration as her theme in The Paper Zoo. Some examples are as cute as the title might suggest. Others, such as Robert Hooke’s drawing of a louse clinging to a human hair seen through a microscope in 1665, distinctly less so. But although accuracy, not beauty, was their point, many are nonetheless beautiful.”
— Martin Gayford, Spectator, best art books of the year
"Exploring five hundred years of animals in art and featuring the exotic, native, domestic, and paradoxical, Sleigh’s splendid book is alive with marvelous images, accompanied by a superb text."
— Eileen Battersby, Irish Times, favourite nonfiction of the year
"One of the top five illustrated books of the year. The Paper Zoo focuses firmly on the planet’s biodiverse past, rummaging through the British Library’s wealth of natural history illustrations spanning five hundred years. Science historian Sleigh leads us through an ark of beasts from the exotic to the ‘paradoxical’, limned by greats of scientific illustration. Robert Hooke’s eighteenth-century microscopic menagerie of drone flies and lice jostle with natural historian John Ray’s Dürer-like renderings of fish from the 1680s. The nineteenth-century art ranges further South; my favourite is an anonymous double portrait of langurs (one black, one white) staring sagely out in mid-snack."
— Barbara Kiser, Nature
"[Sleigh] gathers five hundred years' worth of beautiful natural history illustrations to explore the relationship between art and science."
— Science News