- Published: 23 April 2025
- ISBN: 9781847927729
- Imprint: Bodley Head
- Format: Trade Paperback
- Pages: 288
- RRP: $36.99
The Ocean's Menagerie
How Earth's Strangest Creatures Reshape the Rules of Life

















- Published: 23 April 2025
- ISBN: 9781847927729
- Imprint: Bodley Head
- Format: Trade Paperback
- Pages: 288
- RRP: $36.99
Harvell … reveal[s] some of the exceptional attributes of … underwater marvels
Financial Times, *Books to Look Out For 2025*
A love letter to the ocean, and its weird and wonderful creatures, from an eminent explorer and marine biologist. Each page is full of wonder and surprise, and in every tale of a shape-shifting octopus or luminous jellyfish, we are reminded why the ocean is worth conserving
Steve Brusatte, Sunday Times bestselling author of The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs
Creatures without backbones are more than 99 percent of our planet’s animal species. Ocean invertebrates have billions of years of experience living, changing and proliferating into an astonishing array of shapes, sizes, and ways of living. They’re more diversely weirder — and more mysterious — than big, bony, familiar animals. Drew Harvell has explored, thought deeply about, seen deeply into, and actually lived in the ocean. The ocean’s life is woven into her own. She is deeply in love with her amazing subjects. And a few pages into this warm and wondrous book, you will be too
Carl Safina, New York Times bestselling author of Beyond Words
Dr. Drew brings us a magnificent stable of marine critters, so beautiful as to be almost art, so astonishing in their lifestyles as to be almost superheroes. She delivers smooth prose like the incoming tide, building a depth of feeling and flow of discoveries to let us see, underneath every wave and in every sea, how thrillingly complex and stunningly lovely ocean wildlife can be
Stephen Palumbi, author of The Extreme Life of the Sea
Everyone lives on Planet Ocean, but not everyone has a front row seat to see what makes it so wonderful. Drew Harvell is the teacher you want to reveal the intricate mysteries that make up most life in the sea. The Ocean’s Menagerie has unforgettable lessons that mix science, wonder, and a deep love for life beneath the water’s edge
Nick Pyenson, author of Spying on Whales
A vividly revelatory exploration of a more ancient biological universe, adjacent yet largely invisible to our own and offering countless benefits to humanity’s future
William Gibson, author of Agency
In an underwater world of sea pens and comb jellies, where stony lettuce corals do battle with purple gorgonians, Drew Harvell is the perfect guide, companion, and translator. She writes with undiminished wonder about creatures she has spent a lifetime studying, filling The Ocean’s Menagerie with astonishing science and storytelling. A book of marvels
Thor Hanson, author of Close to Home
The Ocean's Menagerie is a marine smorgasbord of the spineless. Her life's-work, exploring the cracks and crevices of seafloors across the world is the backbone of a story full of overlooked organisms who thrive without one. What she has discovered is magic and bewildering, astonishing creatures that challenge our idea of animalhood and pull off biological tricks that transform our landlubber lives. This will make you look again at the marine lives around you, whether you swim past them or encounter them on the shore. The exquisite and strange inventions marine invertebrates have evolved are as surprising and wonderful as the glass miniatures that unite her journeys. It is the portrait of the deeply human activity of marine biology that I loved most; Harvell not only helps you understand the startling lives of marine invertebrates but does so through an immersion in the lives of the funny, impressive and peculiar people who peer together through the waters of the world
Tom Mustill, author of How To Speak Whale
In The Ocean’s Menagerie she [Harvell] dons her scuba gear so we don’t have to, and recounts a lifetime of experience meeting the remarkable marine creatures that almost nobody else will ever get to see… [An] enchanting book
The Times, *Book of the Week*
The ocean is where all life began, four billion years ago, but as humans we only ever get to glimpse a fraction of it. Luckily the marine biologist Drew Harvell has donned her scuba gear and met some remarkable marine creatures — and she tells us about their fascinating lives in this book
The Times, *Best Books of 2025 so far*
[A] fascinating new book… [Harvell] writes vividly and with tangible delight about this strange world, zooming in on a series of the most striking of these animals
Spectator