Many people know Laurenz as the 1973 Nobel Prize winner in Physiology and Medicine, but are not sure what his major academic achievement was, and the answer lies in this book, The Goose Whisperer. Europe's Danube River and the shores of Lake Amulet are a world where geese and geese live. Here Laurenz observed the life history of geese and geese day after day, year after year, and recorded their life history, generation after generation, in the form of a fascinating scientific journal, which he wrote as The Goose Whisperer. He was convinced that the behavior of geese and geese is particularly suitable for scientific research, because it has many similarities with human behavior, which is far more complex and varied than generally imagined; he found that geese and geese are amazingly social, and when he saw how they courted, fought, raised their children, and expressed their joys, anger, and sorrows, the human beings, who are claimed to be the spirits of all living creatures, could not help but be moved. Like King Solomon's Rings, this scientific book is full of interesting stories: Ada, a female goose who has been through a lot, has been married a number of times comparable to movie stars; Coberschlitz, a homosexual male goose, makes Max, another male goose, in a dilemma between it and Martina, a female goose; Adolphus, with the courage of the first time as a father of geese, challenged a rival of high authority, and once the battle was successfully fought, he and his family held a triumphant victory song! Ceremony ...... reading Laurenz, people do not have to have science books difficult to understand the concern, which may be the unique and wonderful place of animal behavior research.
This book was the last one Laurenz wrote before he died, and it epitomizes his life's work. What is documented in this book is the culmination of his life's greatest research, and while it is purely academic, it is also a book that everyone can understand. The book has esoteric terms and difficult concepts, and is a rare scientific book that does not require a special scientific foundation to understand.