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A vacuum cleaner salesman writes himself into the Cold War in Cuba.
Krauss constructs the history of an oxygen atom from the Big Bang to far into the future. Absolutely engrossing. I think we may be living through a golden age of popular science writing. There is so much quality work to be read in so many scientific fields it is hard to know where to begin.
Hiassen is funny. Not as funny as Pratchett or Wodehouse, but still funny enough.
A damn good novel about youth and poetry set mostly in Mexico City in the ’70s.
Smolin surveys the current state of fundamental theoretical physics and finds some problems. String theory has dominated the field for decades but has yet to produce a new experimental prediction. Furthermore, there is no real string theory as such, but rather an enormous number of possible theories which may or may not be unified under [...]
A collection of papers authored by Hofstadter and the members of his Fluid Analogies Research Group, this book presents the results of many years work in cognitive science research. Also included are a couple papers pointedly criticizing some other approaches in the field, the main criticism being a failure to model human cognition in a [...]