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My
newest book will be out in July. Preorder it now -- just
click on it, go to Amazon, and help me earn royalties!
And you can still buy my last book, The Big Bang Theory. |
August 02, 2004'Nother ReviewI think Publisher's Weekly is pretty much REQUIRED to write a review on every book that is ever published, but I am still pleased they take the time to write about my books. Their reviews are always really nicely written as well (Hey, this one had Latin in it!) and I kinda like that too. . . From Publisher's Weekly: A is for absentmindedness, and yes, the greatest scientist of the 20th century was a stereotypically absentminded professor. E is for his famous equation on the relation between energy and mass, which is nicely explained here in a clear, comprehensible way. M is for McCarthyism, which Einstein openly decried, and also for Marilyn Monroe, whose link to Einstein is wholly fictional. Fox (The Big Bang Theory) and Keck, a science reporter for public radio station WHYY-FM in Philadelphia, say their alphabetic omnium gatherum "is designed to be as casual or as specific as the reader wishes," and that's a fair description. Details about Einstein's life, not just his science, are found in these alphabetical fragments, which cover the physicist's feelings on Israel and Judaism, on pacifism (which he espoused) and on quantum mechanics (which he famously rejected), as well as his relations with other scientists and with his own family. Novice students of physics and casual browsers can learn a fair amount from these entries, though, of course, it's no substitute for reading one of the many comprehensive books on Einstein's life and work. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Posted by karenceliafox at August 2, 2004 01:17 PM Comments
A positve concise review; good for you two, too! Posted by: travel angent at August 3, 2004 02:22 PM
The story of a girl trying to write some fiction.
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