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But I'm not going to lie. Was there any ''real'' need to include the Zebra Jumping Spider in the list? Do I ''truly'' need to know that it ''can be spotted on windowsills or in corners behind the curtains''? It's bad enough that it's autumn and house spiders keep ''sprinting across the carpet whilst searching for females''. And y'know, if ever pages ''didn't'' need photos, these were the pages. I know it's silly. I know it's girly. But I'm arachnophobic. There, I said it. Sorry, Mike Dilger, but I've blu-tacked pages 127 and 128 together. I won't be looking at them again. But I will be looking at all the other pages again. And again. And again. Because I love this book.
Author Mike Dilger will be well known to any budding naturalists out there. They'll have seen him on ''Springwatch'' and ''Autumnwatch'' and ''Nature's Top 40'' on the BBC. He has a great way with words and manages to be both succinct and informative and also to imbue his text with a great deal of energy and enthusiasm. The result is a book that will appeal equally to the practical and less-than-enthusiastic reader, and the nature geek craving as much information as possible. Did you know that the banned pesticide DDT caused the peregrine falcon to lay eggs with shells that were too thin to be viable? And if it hadn't been banned, those beautiful birds would have died out? Or that the common shrew can go only a few hours without food before dying of starvation?
The photography is beautiful - from detailed close-ups of insects (and, ugh, spiders) to larger animals exhibiting natural behaviour, you just won't stop looking. ''Wild Town'' would make a perfect gift and it will inspire an interest in urban wildlife that could last a lifetime. What more could you want? Highly recommended.

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