Leonardo's Foot: How 10 Toes, 52 Bones, & 66 Muscles...

Item Information
Item#: 9781934137628
Author Rinzler, Carol Ann
Cover Paperback
 


A Selection of theScientific American,History, and BOMC2 Book Clubs

"An in-depth look at the anatomy and history of feet reveals their often overlooked importance in human evolution, medicine and art.” #151;Science News

"Stylish, informative, entertaining, and pleasantly personal . . . Whether Rinzler is exploring how our feet explain or illuminate such topics as evolution, disability, racism, diet, or desire, she maintains a fascinating perspective on the peculiarities of being human.” #151;Rain Taxi Review of Books

"This neat little book draws a clear picture of our feet, providing understanding that extends far beyond the obvious. Readers often like to walk away from a book feeling they learned something#151;that the author left them with a new way to look at an old idea, and this book fulfills that need.” #151;City Book Review

"Rinzler lifts the lowly human foot to new heights in this appealing book.” #151;Booklist(starred review)

Leonardo’s Footstretches back to the fossil record and forward to recent discoveries in evolutionary science to demonstrate that it was our feet rather than our brains that first distinguished us from other species within the animal kingdom. Taking inspiration from Leonardo da Vinci’s statement that "the human foot is a masterpiece of engineering and a work of art,” Carol Ann Rinzler leads us on a fascinating stroll through science, medicine, and culture to shed light on the role our feethave played in the evolution of civilization.

Whether discussing the ideal human form in classical antiquity, the impressive depth of the arching soles on the figures in Sandro Botticelli’sBirth of Venus,an array of foot maladies and how they have affected luminaries from Lord Byron to Benjamin Franklin, or delving into the history of foot fetishism, Rinzler has created a wonderfully diverse catalog of details on our lowest extremities. This is popular science writing at its most entertaining#151;page after page of fascinating facts, based around the playful notion that appreciating this often overlooked part of our body is essential to understanding what it is to be human.

Carol Ann Rinzler, a former nutrition columnist for the New YorkDaily News,has contributed to a number of publications, including theNew York Times.She is the author of more than twenty books on health and medicine, includingNutrition for Dummies,an international bestseller translated into fourteen languages.