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Boltzmann's Tomb: Travels in Search of Science
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Boltzmann's Tomb: Travels in Search of Science
Current price: $25.00
Barnes and Noble
Boltzmann's Tomb: Travels in Search of Science
Current price: $25.00
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A selection of the
Scientific American
book club
Recommended by MSNBC,
Los Angeles Times
, & American Association for the Advancement of Science’s
SB&F
magazine
This wonderful scientific memoir captures the romance and beauty of research in precise poetic prose that is as gorgeous and evocative as anything written by Rilke, painted by Seurat, or played by Casals.”
Mary Doria Russell
, author of
Doc
and
The Sparrow
A radiant love letter to science from a scientist with a poet’s soul . . . Green is an exquisite writer, and his fierce focus and mastery of style are reminiscent of the biologist and essayist Lewis Thomas.”
Kirkus Reviews
In
Boltzmann’s Tomb
, Bill Green interweaves the story of his own lifelong evolution as a scientist, and his work in the Antarctic, with a travelogue that is a personal and universal history of science. Like Richard Holmes’
The Age of Wonder
this book serves as a marvelous introduction to the great figures of science. Along with lyrical meditations on the tragic life of Galileo, the wildly eccentric Tycho Brahe, and the visionary Sir Isaac Newton, Green’s ruminations return throughout to the lesser-known figure of Ludwig Boltzmann. Using Boltzmann’s theories of randomness and entropy as a larger metaphor for the unpredictable paths that our lives take, Green shows us that science, like art, is a lived adventure.
Bill Green
is a geochemist and professor emeritus at Miami Universityin Oxford, Ohio. He is also the author of
Water, Ice & Stone: Science and Memory on the Antarctic Lakes
which received the American Museum of Natural History’s John Burroughs Award for Nature Writing, was a finalist for the PEN/Martha Albrand Award, and was excerpted in
The Ends of the Earth: An Anthology of the Finest Writing on the Arctic and the Antarctic,
edited by Elizabeth Kolbert.
Scientific American
book club
Recommended by MSNBC,
Los Angeles Times
, & American Association for the Advancement of Science’s
SB&F
magazine
This wonderful scientific memoir captures the romance and beauty of research in precise poetic prose that is as gorgeous and evocative as anything written by Rilke, painted by Seurat, or played by Casals.”
Mary Doria Russell
, author of
Doc
and
The Sparrow
A radiant love letter to science from a scientist with a poet’s soul . . . Green is an exquisite writer, and his fierce focus and mastery of style are reminiscent of the biologist and essayist Lewis Thomas.”
Kirkus Reviews
In
Boltzmann’s Tomb
, Bill Green interweaves the story of his own lifelong evolution as a scientist, and his work in the Antarctic, with a travelogue that is a personal and universal history of science. Like Richard Holmes’
The Age of Wonder
this book serves as a marvelous introduction to the great figures of science. Along with lyrical meditations on the tragic life of Galileo, the wildly eccentric Tycho Brahe, and the visionary Sir Isaac Newton, Green’s ruminations return throughout to the lesser-known figure of Ludwig Boltzmann. Using Boltzmann’s theories of randomness and entropy as a larger metaphor for the unpredictable paths that our lives take, Green shows us that science, like art, is a lived adventure.
Bill Green
is a geochemist and professor emeritus at Miami Universityin Oxford, Ohio. He is also the author of
Water, Ice & Stone: Science and Memory on the Antarctic Lakes
which received the American Museum of Natural History’s John Burroughs Award for Nature Writing, was a finalist for the PEN/Martha Albrand Award, and was excerpted in
The Ends of the Earth: An Anthology of the Finest Writing on the Arctic and the Antarctic,
edited by Elizabeth Kolbert.