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The Not Old - Better Show

#802 Unveiling the Past, Unearthing the Future: The Saga of Science with Ann Parson

The Not Old - Better Show

Paul Vogelzang

Health & Fitness, Society & Culture

4.7107 Ratings

🗓️ 24 April 2024

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Unveiling the Past, Unearthing the Future: The Saga of Science with Ann Parson

The Not Old Better Show, Inside Science Interview Series

Welcome, discerning listeners, birders, and bird watchers, to a new chapter of the Not Old Better Show Science Interview Series on radio and podcast. Today, we journey through the pages of history into the heart of America's scientific awakening with our esteemed guest, science writer, Ann B. Parson, author of "The Birds of Dog." This historical fiction novel, a tapestry woven with threads of fact and fiction, delves into the rich and often overlooked narratives of America's earliest scientific minds and their tussle with nature's untouched wonders.

Imagine a time when the clatter of the telegraph and the hiss of steam engines were as novel as smartphones are today. A time when new technologies were hurtling humanity forward, yet paradoxically threatening the very splendors they sought to study. In "The Birds of Dog," Parson brings this vibrant era to life through the eyes of Catharine Pickering, a fictional curator's assistant at the Boston Society of Natural History, and her cousin Charles, a true historical figure and a pioneer of the natural sciences, including amazing letters written in the 1830s!

That, of course, is our guest today, science writer Ann Parson, reading from her new book, "The Birds of Dog." In our conversation today with Ann Parson, we'll explore the pivotal choices behind Parson's shift from nonfiction to the world of historical fiction, allowing her to color within and beyond the lines of history's canvas. We'll discuss the interplay of hunting, the advent of wildlife conservation, and the rise of technologies that both propelled science and imperiled its subjects.

But what of the characters that dance across these pages? From John James Audubon to Charles Dickens, Henry Thoreau to John Wilkes Booth's father, Parson stitches these historical giants into the fabric of her narrative, breathing life into the past with her meticulous research and vibrant storytelling.

So prepare to be whisked away to a time of curiosity cabinets and scientific marvels, where the world was ripe for discovery and every new finding was a treasure. This is "The Birds of Dog," a story of passion, progress, and the perpetual dance between humanity's reach for knowledge and the natural world's enigmatic beauty. Join us for this expedition through time, where science and story meet, right here on the  Not Old Better Show Science Inter

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Not Old Better Show, the show covering all things health, wellness, culture, and more.

0:06.0

The show for all of us who aren't old were better.

0:09.0

Each week we'll interview superstars, experts, and ordinary people doing extraordinary things, all related to this wonderful experience of getting better, not older.

0:19.0

Now here's your host, the award-winning Paul Vogel-Zang. Welcome, discerning listeners, birders, bird watchers

0:28.1

to a new chapter. On the not-old-better show, Science, Interviews series on radio and Podcast, I'm Paul Holgill saying.

0:34.3

Today we journey through the pages of history into the Heart of America's Scientific

0:38.6

Awakening with our esteemed guest, Science Writer Anne B. Parsons, author of the new book The Birds of Dog.

0:47.2

This historical fiction novel, a tapestry woven with threads of fact and fiction, delves into the rich and often overlooked

0:55.1

narratives of America's earliest scientific minds and their tussle with

0:59.6

nature's untouched wonders. Imagine a time when the clatter of the Telegraph and the hiss of

1:06.4

steam engines were as novel as smartphones today, a time when new technologies were hurtling humanity forward yet paradoxically

1:16.4

threatening the very splendors they sought to study. In Anne Parsons' new book

1:21.7

The Birds of Dog, and Parsons brings this vibrant era to life through

1:26.6

the eyes of Catherine Pickering, a fictional curator's assistant at the Boston Society of Natural History and her cousin Charles, a true historical figure

1:37.2

and a pioneer of the natural sciences, including some amazing letters written in the 1830s.

1:43.7

I am reading from one of the many letters in the book and the letters are coming from a

1:49.8

curator's assistant at the Boston Society of Natural History. This is back in 1830.

1:55.8

She's writing her cousin who's out on an exploring expedition in South Seas.

2:01.3

And her letter February 2nd, 1839 goes this way.

2:06.1

Dear Cousin, the Society's Museum

2:08.9

continues to accumulate samples at an alarming rate.

2:12.7

As you once said yourself, it's every curator's dilemma.

...

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