The architects in 'Zoomorphic' are like a dream team of eco-friendly creatives. My favorite is Thomas Heatherwick—his 'Seed Cathedral' for the 2010 Shanghai Expo used 60,000 fiber-optic rods to mimic a dandelion, and it’s pure magic. Then there’s Janine Benyus, who literally wrote the book on biomimicry; her ideas on copying ecosystems for design are game-changing. The book also dives into Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic domes, which take cues from radiolaria plankton. It’s nerdy but in the coolest way—like a TED Talk meets 'National Geographic'.
Reading about 'Zoomorphic' felt like unlocking a secret level in a game where architects are the protagonists. Javier Senosiain’s 'Nautilus House' in Mexico is a spiraling concrete seashell you can live in—how cool is that? The book also spotlights Doris Kim Sung, who designs 'smart' metal skins that react to sunlight like human skin. And then there’s Vincent Callebaut’s floating cities inspired by lily pads. It’s not just about buildings; it’s about solving climate crises with termite-mound ventilation and lotus-leaf waterproofing. Makes me wish my apartment could self-cool like a beehive.
Zoomorphic: New Animal Architecture' is this wild dive into how nature inspires modern design, and the key figures behind it are total visionaries. The book highlights architects like Greg Lynn, who blends organic forms with futuristic tech—his work with blob architecture feels like something out of a sci-fi flick. Then there’s Frei Otto, the pioneer of lightweight structures inspired by spiderwebs and bird skulls. His Munich Olympic Stadium roof is iconic.
Another standout is Neri Oxman, whose MIT lab merges biology and design in mind-bending ways, like 3D-printing materials that mimic tree bark. And let’s not forget Michael Pawlyn, who pushes sustainable architecture by studying desert beetles and coral reefs. The book’s a treasure trove for anyone obsessed with where nature meets innovation. I love how it makes you see buildings as living, breathing things.
What grabbed me about 'Zoomorphic' were the lesser-known names, like Kenya Hara, who infuses Japanese minimalism with organic textures, or Mitchell Joachim’s 'Fab Tree Hab'—a house grown from living trees. The book’s strength is mixing big names with niche innovators, showing how a spider’s silk or a whale’s flipper can shape skyscrapers. It’s less a textbook and more a love letter to nature’s genius, with architects as its translators.
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Bride of the Beasts
Terri Clare
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The Scions rule the world now.
Born of celestial light, they turned on their creators and claimed the earth for themselves. But their victory came at a cost—every daughter of their kind has withered into dust, and extinction looms.
So they hunt human women to survive.
Anwen has always been fragile.
Sickly. Ordinary.
She was meant to be hidden away in a sanctuary, safe from the monsters who would claim her.
Instead, she’s taken by three of the most feared shifters alive.
A Dragon, cold and untouchable.
A Lycan, lethal and always too close.
A Minotaur, silent and watching—like she’s a puzzle he intends to solve.
They expect her to die like the others.
Another delicate human who won’t survive the bond.
But Anwen doesn’t break.
She burns.
And the longer she remains in their fortress, the more their control begins to unravel. Their magic bends toward her. Their instincts sharpen. Their possessiveness turns feral.
Others want her.
Their High King demands her.
But these three won’t give her up.
Because the fragile human they stole?
She might be the most dangerous creature in their world.
And they’re done pretending she isn’t theirs.
I met evil when I was a teenager. It never left me after that, hovered over me like a dark cloud, followed me everywhere.
When I least expected, he barged into my life like he owned it.
Kidnapped and vulnerable, I am trapped on a stranded island with no way out. There's nowhere I can hide.
I am afraid. I fear his gentleness more than his cruelity. I don't know if I can survive this but I do know that one of us will be ruined by the time this ends.
Every princess dreams about meeting a prince charming. I don't get the prince, I get the King who wants to rule over everything.
He's a Beast but I am no Belle.
The Beauty changed the beast. The Beast fell in love with her. A beautiful fairytale it was.
The Beast doesn't love me, I can't tame him.
This isn't a love story. It's a story of obsession.
18+. Not your traditional Mafia Romance. Proceed with Caution.
Wanting to escape the turmoil last year had caused, my mom thought a fresh start was what we needed, so we moved to a different country. My first clash with the three Glass brothers happened at the airport, and ever since then, they’ve been everywhere I go. Turns out they’re my neighbors and the golden boys of my new high school too.
I want to stay away from them and focus on maintaining my GPA and the drama-free life I promised myself, but it’s not working. There’s a dangerously strong pull between us that feels almost unreal. My pulse trips over itself when they’re near, my blood boils when I see them with other girls, and my body betrays me, craving their slightest touch. It’s confusing, maddening and especially aggravating. The fact that all three of them look like they had stepped out of a dark fantasy novel written by a woman with unrealistic expectations wasn’t helping the case.
Then I witnessed horror—bones snapping and reforming, fur replacing skin. The Glass brothers aren’t humans; they are beasts, Lycans, Supreme Alphas, and just as I thought things couldn’t get worse, they tell me the pull I have been feeling is because I’m mated to them—all three of them. But luckily, I have the chance to reject them, and I’m going to take it, because I’m just an ordinary human girl.
I am not Beauty.
And this certainly isn’t Beauty and the Beasts.
Animal Biologist, Isobelle Harding, lands the opportunity of a lifetime when the University sends her abroad to study a rare species of wolf. Unaware that the remote state of Whitehaven is a sanctuary for shifters, her presence captures the attention of the Bennett Brothers. The quadruplet werewolves want Isobelle for themselves, and the smoking-hot rangers are keen to study her anatomy intensively. Isobelle is about to find out exactly what it means when brothers who play together, stay together.
Back in the Greek Dark Ages of the 12th-19th Centuries BC, anthromorphs and humans live in the same society until this history became a nightmare. Do humans still believe they exist? Since then, anthromorphs became unidentifiable, especially Bryle Akihiko Alinsky, the rarest Wolf Trait Anthromorph living who have hermaphroditism wherein he have two sex genitals but only have one reproductive organ that cause him to be the most unique Man-Wolf Anthromorph.
Bryle despise humans. He always mask himself with good nature and socialization. His parents were part of those frightening history that hunts him every night upon closing his eyes.
He hid his true nature through his shadow but one night, a man, a human rather, triggered his inner wolf causing him to go dizzy. Ears and tails tingling to emerge. He run away and almost got caught, he wished to not see that human again for it can be too dangerous to be near him. His inner-wolf want that man, he was his wolf's desired mate.
Giovanni Keller is a CEO and a scientist whom his mother got bitten by a Wolf Trait Anthromorph before. And now she's in a dead-alive situation and they can only find the cure in a Wolf Trait Anthromorph. Now that he truly fell in love with Bryle, it turned out that Bryle is the creature he'd been dying to lay his hand on.
A novel about two different worlds. Would Gio give up the ardor they've felt for each other and use Bryle to be his subject and make him suffer? Would Bryle fight for himself or let the person he love do what he wants? Will history repeat itself? Would darkness, blood-filled, humans against anthromorph once would happen again?
Westbridge Academy is not a school for humans, It is where alphas are trained, bloodlines are sharpened, and monsters learn to rule. Isla Vale knows this better than anyone but she disguised as “Eli,” a quiet scholarship boy enrolled in an elite advanced science program, Isla hides among werewolves, shifters, and other supernatural elites, masking her scent, her body, and her fear every single day. Living in the dorm make things worse and one mistake could mean exposure.
One slip could mean death but Westbridge is ruled by instincts no one can fully control.
Kieran Blackthorne the academy’s golden alpha heir is everything Isla should avoid dominant, teasing, dangerously perceptive. From the moment they meet, his attention lingers too long, his instincts pulling him toward someone he shouldn’t want.
Then there is Finn Ashcroft, a calm and observant beta with a reputation on the basketball court, notices what others miss. He becomes Isla’s anchor, her protector and possibly the first to suspect that “Eli” is hiding more than just secrets.
As rivalries ignite, rumors spread, and wolf instincts sharpen, Isla is pulled into a volatile triangle of attraction, jealousy, and danger. Every close call brings her nearer to discovery and every heartbeat risks awakening instincts that could expose her humanity.
When the truth finally comes out to the worst possible people Westbridge erupts.
Because humans were never meant to live among wolves and wolves do not forgive deception easily.
I stumbled upon 'Zoomorphic: New Animal Architecture' while browsing for something fresh in design literature, and wow, it’s a gem! The book explores how nature’s genius inspires cutting-edge architecture, blending biology and design in ways that feel almost magical. The author doesn’t just dump facts—they weave stories about termite mounds influencing ventilation systems or how whale flippers shaped turbine blades. It’s packed with visuals, too, which makes the concepts pop.
What really hooked me was the balance between theory and real-world applications. It’s not some dry academic tome; it feels like a conversation with a forward-thinking architect who’s geeking out over biomimicry. If you’re into sustainable design or just love seeing how nature solves problems, this’ll spark your creativity. I ended up doodling building ideas for hours after reading!
Ever stumbled upon a book that makes you see the world differently? 'Zoomorphic: New Animal Architecture' did that for me. It explores how animal biology and behavior inspire cutting-edge architectural designs. Think buildings that mimic termite mounds' natural ventilation or bridges shaped like spider silk. The book dives deep into biomimicry, showing how nature’s genius solves human problems. It’s not just about aesthetics—it’s functional, sustainable, and downright ingenious.
What blew my mind was the chapter on 'whale-inspired turbine blades.' Engineers studied humpback whale fins to create wind turbines that are quieter and more efficient. The blend of biology and design feels like a peek into the future. If you’re into architecture, ecology, or just cool ideas, this book’s a treasure trove. I still flip through it for inspiration when I hit creative blocks.
Exploring the intersection of architecture and animal-inspired design is such a fascinating niche! If you enjoyed 'Zoomorphic: New Animal Architecture,' you might adore 'Biomimicry in Architecture' by Michael Pawlyn. It dives deep into how nature’s genius can shape sustainable, innovative buildings. Pawlyn’s work feels like a love letter to evolutionary design, with case studies that’ll make you see termite mounds and spider silk in a whole new light.
Another gem is 'Architecture in the Age of Divided Representation' by Dalibor Vesely, which touches on organic forms in a more philosophical way. It’s denser but rewarding—like sipping slow-brewed coffee for the mind. For something visually stunning, 'The Architecture of Birds' by Mark Rauzon blends photography and structural analysis, making it perfect for flipping through on lazy weekends. These books all share that magical blend of biology and creativity.