Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
What would today's world be like if man had not domesticated animals? This is the question that celebrated animal expert Roger Caras explores in A Perfect Harmony. A fascinating and colorful combination of history, anthropology, and personal experience, the book examines animal species both familiar and exotic in order to illustrate their monumental impact on the development of civilization. Accessible, absorbing, and wonderfully appealing, A Perfect Harmony illuminates a vital but virtually ignored aspect of human history: the partnership between man and domestic animals through the ages. At the dawn of civilization, Caras asserts, man alone was unable to take the giant steps necessary to achieve our current levels of technology and sophistication. But at each stage in our cultural evolution, he writes, domesticated animals enabled us to move on to the next level. The extent of our dependence upon these animals -- which have provided us with food, clothes, shelter, and means of transport -- is beyond calculation. By turns wicked and wry, passionate and poignant, Caras illustrates how every domesticated animal from the reindeer to the silkworm has provided some valuable service to its human masters and has, in many cases, altered the course of history. - Jacket flap.
Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
Previews available in: English
| Edition | Availability |
|---|---|
|
1
A Perfect Harmony: The Intertwining Lives of Animals and Humans Throughout History
2002, Purdue University Press
Paperback
in English
1557532419 9781557532411
|
eeee
|
|
2
A perfect harmony: the intertwining lives of animals and humans throughout history
1997, Simon & Schuster
in English
- 1st Fireside ed.
0684835312 9780684835310
|
cccc
|
| 3 |
zzzz
|
|
4
A perfect harmony: the intertwining lives of animals and humans throughout history
1996, Simon & Schuster
Hardcover
in English
0684811006 9780684811000
|
aaaa
|
| 5 |
cccc
|
Book Details
Table of Contents
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 253-257) and index.





