Penguins: Their World, Their Ways
Tui De Roy, photographs by Mark Jones, Julie Cornthwaite


Hardback | Aug 2013 | CSIRO Publishing | 9781486300563 | 240pp | 245x170mm | GEN | AUD$49.95, NZD$59.99

 Penguins are, perhaps, the most loved of birds. We've been fascinated by them for just about as long as we've known they existed. When penguins are on land, their actions appear to us so humorous and expressive that we can be excused for thinking we understand them perfectly, identifying with what looks like moods and foibles similar to our own. Little do we realise that their private life is as complex and mysterious as that of any wild animal or that the bulk of their existence — in terms of time, space and survival skills — takes place very far from our prying eyes, hidden beneath the ocean waves.

While a few types of penguins are relatively wellknown — thanks to zoos, books, films and select travel destinations — not everyone realises the family is represented by 18 species (or even 19, depending on the taxonomy used). Those with retiring personalities or nocturnal habits tend to remain overlooked and rarely photographed.