Rating: Summary: Excellent! Review: This is probably the best book on science I have ever read (and trust me, I've read many). Absolutely exceptional! Bryson has an incredible talent to explain the inexplicable and make public the obscure. Fantastic book, worth every penny.
Rating: Summary: The best book ever Review: The other reviewers have pretty much said it all. I just wish there were books like this when I was a young kid (or even when I was in college). Bryson is an amazing writer. He touches on all of the major areas of science and science history, but the star of this book is not the subject matter, it's the manner in which the story is told. Impossible to put down, this book will grip you and hold you from start to finish. I stopped reading it 50 pages from the end because I did not want it to end (that abstinence lasted all of two days). I've read some excellent books in my 39 years, but this is, without question, the best book of any type that I've ever read. Absolutely phenomenal.
Rating: Summary: VERY readable Review: The problem with most books of this sort is their dryness. Ever try to get through a Stephen Hawking book? Then you know what I mean. Bryson is witty and engaging and links together discoveries over the ages that have led us to where we are today. Great reading and very illuminating - makes me want to learn more!This one is a keeper. I usually read and relist and sell here, but this one I'm keeping for future reference!
Rating: Summary: Excellent Review: I am a high school science teacher and have been using this book to give our students an overview of many areas of science. They love it. And it really gives them a good background for more in depth reading. Highly recommended.
Rating: Summary: A fresh look at science Review: As the other reviews state, this book is an excellent and comprehensive work on virtually all aspects of science. The book also gives interesting anecdotes of the history of how science came to be -- the people, the rivalries, the mistakes, etc. The book is written in Bryson's typical witty and entertaining style. One last thing to note: the book has a spectacular bibliography listing all of the sources Bryson used for research. This bibliography can be used to find further, more in-depth works to look into topics of personal interest. The bibliography alone is worth the cost of the book.
Rating: Summary: Highly entertaining and informative, this is a quick read! Review: Okay, so maybe it is not a history of 'everything,' but it certainly gives you an informative and amusing rundown on the likes of astronomy, chemistry, physics, mathematics, evolution, biology and a few other areas of science that usually go unexplored by the layman. In fact, a much more fitting title for the book would have been 'a short rundown on modern science' because the book is really an attempt to make all of those subjects you hated in high school seem fun and cool. As usual, Bryson pulls it off! I am a big Bryson fan, but this is mainly because my loves are language, traveling and contemporary society, Bryson's main topics in every book. (Bryson always gives you that feeling that he's the kind of guy you would like to meet up with for conversation at a coffee house and chat for hours about anything.) Alas, when I saw that he was going off in another direction, I admit that I was a bit concerned about whether I would enjoy this foray into science or history, or whatever the book was supposed to be about, and I was definitely not left disappointed. I must admit that some sections were more interesting than others, but I think that this is natural in a book that covers so many topics. Some will obviously find the sections on the evolution of man or the size of the universe more fascinating than passages about subatomic particles, while for others it will be just the opposite, since we all have different levels of tolerance for and interest in different subjects. But they couldn't be discussed in a more enjoyable fashion.
Rating: Summary: The biggest fault of this book is that it eventually ends.. Review: A witty, erudite and totally fascinating romp through science and the (sometimes) eccentric personalities of the scientists and thinkers whose breakthroughs and/or missteps provided the foundation of most scientific thought today. This is a book that I absolutely could not put down and I was sorry to see it end. Bryson has the most wonderful talent to educate and entertain simultaneously.
Rating: Summary: Funny, humbling and scary Review: A Short History of Nearly Everything starts out as though it is going to be a (relative) primer in all matters of science, from physics to geology and biology. The book performs this function admirably, with enough humor to get a layperson like myself over the scientific details without being too bogged down in minutia. This science survey is not, however, what I feel is the book's strongest suit. One of the most valuable lessons this book teaches is the extreme insignificance of human beings in the context of this planet. Since I completed this book, I can't listen to some sportscaster talk about "basketball history" without laughing at the conceit. Having established the history of the planet and our small part at the end of it, Bryson goes on to show the many ways humans are destroying the only habitat likely to support human life. As a result, I am left thinking about lead poisoning, the destruction of species and the ozone, volcanic eruptions in Yellowstone Park, global warming, meteors, and statistical improbability. Bryson's message is ultimately that it is incredibly unlikely that any of us are here at all and we need to preserve our planet if we want our luck to continue. To me, that is a message worth shouting. This book is both entertaining and thought provoking and, if read with an open mind,will change your focus on this planet on human beings' place in it.
Rating: Summary: quick read Review: A wonderful "quick read" on the history of discovery in the sciences. An amazing cast of historic characters, most of whom are not well known.
Rating: Summary: Outstanding Knowledge for the Curious Amateur Review: The title of this book really does it justice. From the beginning of the universe (and how it began) to cells, atoms, human life and everything else scientific, this book covers it. Now, if you are even well-read in any scientific area, this book may not be so exciting to you. No book under 500 pages can do a history of "everything" full justice, but if you are an amateur, and a curious one at that, this book provides foundational knowledge in physics, chemistry, anthroplogy, biology and astronomy. The most wonderful thing about this book, though, is Bryson's ability to convey the most complex theories and concepts in terms that I really believe a 6 year old could understand. I didn't understand isotopes, protons, the quantum leap, relativity or the troposphere all through high school, but within 30 seconds, this guy explains it so clearly. He also provides a true understandinig of how big or small, how far or near things are with easy to picture and grasp analogies. If you're someone who likes to soak up knowledge and have always been curious about this sort of information, this is a must read.
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