Sharks have survived everything Earth has ever placed in their path—mass extinctions, shifting continents, vanished oceans, and dramatic climate cycles. Their endurance is not a matter of luck. It is the direct result of an anatomical design refined over more than 450 million years. In Anatomy & Evolution of Sharks , author Madeline Stann presents a compelling and deeply researched exploration of the structures and systems that define one of the ocean’s most enduring predators. This book reveals how the earliest sharklike creatures emerged long before the dinosaurs, and how their bodies evolved into the streamlined, highly efficient forms we recognize today. It examines the hydrodynamic design that enables effortless movement through water, the skin and dermal denticles that reduce drag, and the fin architecture that provides precise control and stability. The text explores the remarkable flexibility and strength of the cartilaginous skeleton, the powerful muscular system that drives swimming and predation, and the sophisticated digestive, circulatory, and reproductive systems that support a long-lived and slow-growing lineage. A significant portion of the book is dedicated to the shark’s extraordinary sensory suite—vision adapted to both bright and dim waters, a refined sense of smell capable of detecting chemical traces over great distances, hearing tuned to low-frequency vibrations, the lateral line system that reads subtle water movements, and electroreception, the ability to detect the faint electrical fields produced by living organisms. Together, these senses create an integrated network that allows sharks to navigate, hunt, and survive with extraordinary precision. The book also addresses the future of sharks as oceans change rapidly. Rising temperatures, shifting prey distributions, habitat loss, acidification, and human disturbance are already influencing shark behavior, distribution, and anatomy. By understanding how sharks are built and how they evolved, we gain insight into the challenges they now face and the adaptations that may shape their future. Written in clear, accessible language yet grounded in scientific accuracy, Anatomy & Evolution of Sharks offers a comprehensive look at one of nature’s most successful designs. It is an essential resource for ocean enthusiasts, students of marine biology, conservation advocates, and anyone fascinated by the truth behind a creature too often misunderstood. This book invites readers to see sharks not as symbols of fear, but as remarkable survivors whose anatomy tells a powerful story of resilience, adaptation, and ecological importance.