Sunday, August 5, 2012

The Disappearing Spoon

I used to be a chemist, but went to law school when I lost the joy of science.  That was a huge mistake (I probably should have taken courses in instrumentation or looked into lab management), but 17 years later, there's not much I can do about that.   I have, though regained my love of science through books like Oliver Sachs's Uncle Tungsten and Sam Kean's  The Disappearing Spoon.  Kean takes what could be a very dry topic - the periodic table - and illustrates it with a series of stories which vary from tragic (the possible suicide of the greatest chemist to have never won a Nobel prize) to the gossipy (Marie Curie's femme fatale reputation) to the simply bizarre (a kid who tried to build a nuclear reactor as an Eagle Scout project).  Along the way, Kean stops to mention practical jokes (the titular spoon is made of gallium which melts in a nice, hot cup of tea), expensive pens, office politics with world-wide implications, and why several early Nobel Prizes for physics went to chemists.  Science writers have to find a balance between not confusing the less-technically informed audience and not boring readers with a stronger scientific background.  Kean manages the task quite well.

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