Review: ‘Dinosaurs at the Dinner Party’ transports readers to world changed by fossil finds

Edward Dolnick takes readers in “Dinosaurs at the Dinner Party" to the early 1800s as discoveries of dinosaur fossils transformed science and the world’s understanding of prehistoric life.

featured-image

DINOSAURS AT THE DINNER PARTY: How an Eccentric Group of Victorians Discovered Prehistoric Creatures and Accidentally Upended the World. By Edward Dolnick. Scribner.

352 pages. $30. For generations raised on dinosaur toys, “Jurassic Park” films and characters like Barney, it’s hard to imagine a world where dinos and their fossils didn’t exist — or, more accurately, weren’t discovered yet.



That world is exactly where Edward Dolnick takes readers in “Dinosaurs at the Dinner Party: How An Eccentric Group of Victorians Discovered Prehistoric Creatures and Accidentally Upended the World.” Dolnick transports readers to the early 1800s as discoveries of dinosaur fossils transformed science and the world’s understanding of prehistoric life. It was, as Dolnick describes in the book’s opening pages, akin to people today never dreaming of life anywhere beyond Earth.

Today's Top Headlines Story continues below Charleston firm pays $22M for Festival Centre, signs entertainment venue as anchor A ship was abandoned near Johns Island. Now, the Coast Guard is coming to clean up its mess. Filling the void: Spartanburg's WestGate Mall renews effort to sell vacant spaces Clemson offense achieves liftoff in pummeling of App State She was found dead in a Lowcountry motel.

A year later, a family keeps fighting for Sara Beth. Long-awaited fix for traffic woes at US 17, Main Road moves closer to reality. Price has ballooned.

Major drug trafficking corridor runs through Aiken County, S.C. Attorney General says Clemson football announces death of former player Charleston County sends unpopular Johns Island road plan back to the drawing board ESPN College GameDay returning to Columbia “And then picture that one night a spaceship materialized a few dozen feet above Fifth Avenue and proceeded to make a slow and stately tour of Manhattan,” he writes.

With a brisk writing style, Dolnick offers an at-times dizzying tour of the discoveries that blindsided the world and the key players in those finds. They include fascinating figures such as Mary Anning, the 12-year-old who discovered the fossilized skeleton of an ichthyosaur, a prehistoric aquatic reptile. Years later, she discovered the fossilized skeleton of another prehistoric sea creature, the plesiosaur.

Dolnick describes how eagerly museums displayed the fossils Anning found, but left her name unmentioned for years. He also explores the complicated legacy of Richard Owen, the scientist who coined the term “dinosaur” and was the father of the Natural History Museum in London. But he also had a penchant for making enemies with other scientists.

With these profiles and others, Dolnick provides a colorful narrative of a world making sense of discoveries that would shatter notions of where humans stood in history and life overall. Sign up for the Charleston Hot Sheet Get a weekly list of tips on pop-ups, last minute tickets and little-known experiences hand-selected by our newsroom in your inbox each Thursday. Email Sign Up!.