Posts Tagged ‘science’

Barb R. reviews “Packing for Mars”

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

Mary Roach, a science writer, is one of the funniest writers I’ve read in a long time! In her latest book, Packing for Mars, she tackles the less scientific aspects of space travel. She is not so concerned with rocket speed and trajectories, but focuses on the very human problems the astronauts face when they experience zero gravity. What happens if an astronaut gets nauseous on a space walk with a helmet on? How, exactly, does one eat a meal?  Personal hygiene – in space – is particularly challenging, and Roach’s chapters on that aspect of space travel are especially amusing and eye-opening!

The author visited the labs where the astronauts train and even participated in some of the exercises, so her writing, as well as being funny, is very authentic. Roach’s writing style is extremely non-technical and easily understood by the layman.

This book makes me want to read one of her others: Stiff (about cadavers), Spook (the afterlife), and Bonk (about sex).

Hedy reviews KRAKATOA by Simon Winchester, 551.21 WI

Saturday, September 4th, 2010

In August of 1883, one of the biggest volcanic eruptions in the history of world began.  The island of Krakatoa (at least 60,000 years old) was part of the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) and the eruption annihilated it.  It caused a tsunami that killed nearly 40,000 people and the sound it made was heard thousands of miles away.  I discussed this with the River Action Environmental Book Club and we found it engrossing.  Simon Winchester is an excellent nonfiction writer with popular appeal.   Krakatoa was the first major catastrophe that occurred after the invention of the submarine telegraph, so it was instrumental in making the world a “global village”.  Volcanoes are probably the origin of the earth’s atmosphere as well as our fertile soils.  They are fearsome but also fascinating, destructive but also creative.  Winchester is one of those authors that connects the dots–along with the obvious natural sciences, he includes politics, economics,  history, religion. literature, movies, journalism, geography.  His section on continental drift and plate tectonics was especially interesting because the person who proposed it, Alfred Wegener, was told his ideas (published in 1915) were “dangerous, unsettling, ungodly, and evil”.  He died at age 50 having been ridiculed, vilified, and cruelly denied his academic reward.   Now Wegener’s ideas are accepted and he’s considered somewhat of a genius.  To find out more of about him, read Ending in Ice: The Revolutionary Idea and Tragic Expedition of Alfred Wegener by Roger McCoy, 551.092 MC.

I’m reading Winchester’s The Professor and the Madman right now.