Curious books

Marginalia

I’ve written recently about how much I’ve been enjoying Soonish (UK) (US) by Kelly and Zach Weinersmith, a highly amusing exploration of the latest technologies from satellite launch vehicles to 3D printed houses to gene therapy to self-organising robot swarms.


But what else is out there to celebrate the curious?


I recommend Steven Johnson’s Wonderland: How Play Made The Modern World (UK) (US) – a history of technology and economics with a difference. Johnson covers music, fashion, sports and much else with a lovely light touch.


Puzzle fans will have their minds blown – if you’ve not already encountered it – by Raymond Smullyan’s What Is The Name of This Book? (UK) (USBegins with some silly puzzles, moves to variants of the one-always-tells-the-truth, one-always-lies puzzle, and before you know it you’re in the middle of Godel’s incompleteness theorem.


Richard Feynman was often billed as a “curious character”, although I prefer his lectures to his autobiographical work. Try the astonishing QED (UK) (US). I remember trying to explain this one in the pub to my friends, aged 18.


Claude Shannon’s endless desire to play with things and ideas is explored in a solid new biography, A Mind At Play (UK) (USby Soni and Goodman.


Next on my list: Philip Ball’s Curiosity (UK) (USand Walter Isaacson’s Da Vinci (UK) (US), which has been getting good write-ups.


My UK publishers have a competition going on Twitter to win all seven of my books. Or you can purchase any of them here.


 


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Published on December 04, 2017 08:48
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