'Hopeful and fascinating.'
-- The Times
'Sleeping Beauties is a delightful, accessible and information-packed primer on evolutionary biology, taking the reader from the complex details of DNA and proteins to some of humanitys most intriguing successes and failures. Andreas Wagner explains the emergence of many otherwise puzzling traits and speciesand also sheds important new light on the mechanics of evolution itself.'
-- Wall Street Journal
'A fascinating argument, told in an engaging and clear style, that reminds us just how creative evolution can be.'
-- New Scientist
Wagner offers a provocative new picture of how context underlies the success of natures best inventions, across the tree of life and in society poetic Sleeping Beauties is a book of many triumphs. But the most useful of its many messages may be how Wagner equips the reader with a grammar for describing the sleeping beauties in our own lives.
-- Nature
What Darwin didnt say, and Andreas Wagner, a professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Zurich, tells us, is that it can take a long time millions of years before a mutation actually becomes relevant to the survival of the organism Perhaps the books most important message is that the idea of a singular genius creating world-changing inventions out of nothing is a false one.
-- Irish Times
[An] excellent study The accessible prose ensures even excursions into molecular biology are comprehensible, and Wagner finds surprising depth in evolutionary history... This is the rare volume that general readers will enjoy as much as specialists.
-- Publishers Weekly, starred review
Accessible and compelling... [Sleeping Beauties is]a fascinating perspective on dormancys abundant and critical role in evolutionary innovation.
-- Booklist
Wagners emphasis on the fundamental serendipity of success resonates for scientists, humanists, and artists alike. If the fifty-part human hand can prove so versatile, what about a brain with nearly a hundred billion neurons? What other skills lie dormant within, skills we have not even dreamed of?
-- Santa Fe Institute
Thought provoking Wagner explains these issues well and taps into the wider stream of thought that nature has repeatedly come up with the same innovations across many different types of flora and fauna. Two thirds of the book is devoted to how this has played out in nature, and this aspect is argued well and clearly presented.
-- Irish Tech News