Kay Harel is a writer who holds MAs in science journalism from New York University and in English from the CUNY Graduate Center. She has published essays on Darwin as well as on figures such as William James, Edward Lear, and Wallace Stevens in Southwest Review, The Wallace Stevens Journal, and Sexuality and Culture.
A playful, erudite, and fresh take on the emotional and imaginative dimensions of Darwin's work, probing the many connections between his family relationships and the spirit of wonder with which he observed relationships in the living world. -- Ruth Padel, author of <i>Darwin: A Life in Poems</i> This is a joyful book. Instead of dwelling on the role of competition and extinction in Darwin's theory, as is so often done, Kay Harel emphasizes that love of life in all its varieties is crucial to Darwin's thinking and practice. The result is a deeply sympathetic study. -- Gillian Beer, author of <i>Darwin's Plots: Evolutionary Narrative in Darwin, George Eliot, and Nineteenth-Century Fiction</i>