Home Authors
Books
Subjects
Events
Software
Features
Links
Newsletter
Gifts
Blog
Write
Review What's New
Review - Q&A: Cosmic Conundrums and Everyday Mysteries of Science -
Robert Matthews
![]()
|
|
This is a little cracker - not what you'd call heavy duty popular science, but a wonderful bit of light reading that throws in some genuinely fascinating facts.
This is what you could call Last Word Lite. New Scientist magazine has for a number of years had a Last Word page at the back where individuals write in with questions and readers come up with sensible answers. (Though they've always resisted our half-humorous question, if black is defined by a lack of reflection of any colour, what colour is shiny black.) The trouble with Last Word is that the answers tend to be a touch tedious, not generally being written by professional writers, and can be over-technical. Robert Matthews does the same job, but his responses are pithy, light and enjoyable.
The book is divided into a number of sections, but to be honest they don't make much difference. Each is just packed with those sort of questions that we all ask ourselves, but lacking the straightforwardness of children, we don't actually bother to say aloud. Many that have occurred to me over the years - why don't mosquitoes spread HIV/AIDS and why don't people get injured when idiots fire guns into the air (they do) for instance - are in there, along with many others that I'm sure I would have thought of at some point. Sometimes the answer is "we don't really know", but often Matthews can bring a light and effective insight to play.
Just occasionally the questions seem a bit hackneyed or childish (how do they get the stripes into toothpaste?) - but I'm pretty sure anyone will find plenty to surprise here. For the know-it-all, there will be some distinct surprises. Bicycles probably don't stay up the way you thought they did, and those of us who have always impressed people by telling them that glass is really a very stiff liquid, and so old glass tends to be thicker at the bottom, need to think again. Apparently it would take 10 million years for a window pane to get 5% thicker at the base, and the effect we see in old glass is just because medieval glaziers used to put the unevenly manufactured glass of the day thick end down (it makes sense). Oh and Eskimos/Inuit don't have lots of words for different types of snow, it's a myth. Sigh.
If there is any complaint about this book, it's just that the format of lots of little question and answer sections, typically ranging from half a page to a page in length, doesn't make for an entirely smooth read - it could get rather irritating after a while. However this makes it even better as a dip-in book (dare we say it's a great one to keep in the bathroom), and most of the content is so fascinating that it's hard to stop reading once you start. Excellent stuff.
Only in paperback
Reviewed by Martin O'Brien
DISCLAIMERS
This site has no connection with Popular Science magazine or other sites and publications with a similar name.
Much of the content of this site is written by popular science writers or friends of popular science writers. Inevitably many of the reviews in such a small community are written by or about someone we know. We always aim to be impartial in our reviews, but there is a connection which we need make clear, as there is no intention to deceive. The content of any review or article is solely the opinion of the author and should not be read or understood on any other basis. The site exists to promote popular science writing and popular science authors and for this reason should be considered promotional material, just as the editorial reviews in an online bookshop or the blurb on the back of a book should be considered promotional.
The website should not be eaten or used where it can come into contact with water.
Disagree with our review? Want to comment on a feature? Contact us at info@ popularscience.co.uk - have your say!
Copyright © Creativity
Unleashed Limited 2005
Last update 05 June 2007