

A New York Times Bestseller
Do fishes think? Do they really have three-second memories? And can they recognize the humans who peer back at them from above the surface of the water? In What a Fish Knows, the myth-busting ethologist Jonathan Balcombe addresses these questions and more, taking us under the sea, through streams and estuaries, and to the other side of the aquarium glass to reveal the surprising capabilities of fishes. Although there are more than thirty thousand species of fish--more than all mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians combined--we rarely consider how individual fishes think, feel, and behave. Balcombe upends our assumptions about fishes, portraying them not as unfeeling, dead-eyed feeding machines but as sentient, aware, social, and even Machiavellian--in other words, much like us.Longlisted for the 2017 PEN / E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award
One of the 10 Best Popular Science Books of 2016: Biological Sciences, Forbes One of the Week's Best Science Picks, Nature A "Must Read" Book, The Sunday Times (London) One of the Best Books of the Year, National Post "Latest Reads to Pique Your Curiosity," The Toronto Star "Numerous books have shown me how utterly ignorant I am about most creatures I share this planet with, but none humbled me more than What a Fish Knows by Jonathan Balcombe." --Cornelia Funke, The Observer "We Buddhists consider all animals, including fish, as sentient beings who have feelings of joy and pain just as we humans do. We also believe that they have all been kind to us as our mothers many times in the past, and are deserving of our compassion. Therefore, we try to help them in whatever way we can and at least avoid doing them harm. In What A Fish Knows, Jonathan Balcombe vividly shows that fish have feelings and deserve consideration and protection like other sentient beings. I hope reading it will help people become more aware of the benefits of vegetarianism and the need to treat animals with respect." --The Dalai Lama "An extended exploration of the world from a piscine perspective . . . Balcombe makes a persuasive case that what fish know is quite a lot." --Elizabeth Kolbert, The New York Review of Books "[An] exhaustively researched and elegantly written argument for the moral claims of ichthyofauna." --Nathan Heller, The New Yorker