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The Best American Science And Nature Writing 2015: Rebecca Skloot's Anthology of Award-Winning Essays on Our Planet's Challenges and Wonders

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The Best American Series
 
The next edition in a series praised as “undeniably exquisite” (Maria Popova), The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2015 includes work from both award-winning writers and up-and-coming voices in the field. From Brooke Jarvis on deep-ocean mining to Elizabeth Kolbert on New Zealand’s unconventional conservation strategies, this is a group that celebrates the growing diversity in science and nature writing alike. Altogether, the writers honored in this year’s volume challenge us to consider the strains facing our planet and its many species, while never losing sight of the wonders we’re working to preserve for generations to come.

 
The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2015 includes
Sheri Fink, Atul Gawande, Leslie Jamison, Sam Kean, Seth Mnookin, Matthew Power, Michael Specter
and others
 

REBECCA SKLOOT's award-winning science writing has appeared in the New York Times Magazine and elsewhere. Her book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, was an instant New York Times bestseller. It was named a best book of 2010 by more than sixty media outlets, including Entertainment Weekly and NPR, and by the National Academies of Science and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, among others. Skloot is currently writing a book about humans, animals, science, and ethics.
 
TIM FOLGER, series editor, is a contributing editor at Discover and writes about science for several magazines.


352 pages, Paperback

First published October 6, 2015

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About the author

Tim Folger

23 books18 followers
TIM FOLGER is a contributing editor at Discover and writes about science for several magazines.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 88 reviews
Profile Image for Jim.
Author 7 books2,090 followers
March 21, 2016
I read a lot of science articles, but they're a tiny percentage of those available & the idea of a good science editor picking the very best is just too good to pass up. I originally came across it because the 2013 edition was edited by Mary Roach, a favorite author. A friend gave me this edition - a great place to start. I've heard of Skloot's book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, but haven't read it yet. I've heard good things, though. This also contains a piece by Atul Gwande who I've enjoyed reading.

- Foreword by Tim Folger - good intro.

- Introduction by Rebecca Skloot - long & didn't add much to Folger's foreword.

- Waiting for light by Jake Abrahamson - paints a great picture of the problem (lack of electric, especially light) in rural India & mentions several attempted solutions. The current one sounds interesting, but why should it work when so many others have failed? How does/could it apply other places? A science author must include the economic sustainability of the technology or it's just a pipe dream. This didn't, so it is a puff piece - whining. 1 star

- In deep by Burkhard Bilger - is about caving. Wow! I've read some about it before, but never has the entirety been captured so well: the people, the challenges, types of caves, equipment, & more. This has it all including antibacterial underwear & the dangers of fungus. Wow! Fantastic. 5 stars

- A question of corvids by Sheila Webster Boneham - is a wandering look at the crow family. Fun, almost poetic. 3 stars

- The health effects of a world without darkness by Rebecca Boyle - doesn't have a lot of hard data, but there isn't a lot apparently. Artificial light has caused changes & some aren't good. I wasn't thrilled with the overtones that the changes, unless otherwise specified, were bad, though. 3 stars

- Spotted hyena by Alison Hawthorne Deming - was very short & still managed to wander aimlessly. Still, it was interesting. 3 stars

- Life, death, and grim routine fill the day at a Liberian ebola clinic by Sheri Fink - was exactly that. Nothing particularly shocking or new. 2 stars

- No risky chances by Atul Gawande - is a bit from his book Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End, a 5 star book. This piece is it in a nutshell. 5 stars

- Linux for lettuce by Lisa M. Hamilton - covers the issues around patenting seeds. This is not a simple subject & there seems to be no good solution or compromise. The idea of using the Creative Commons (best known for computer Open Source code like Linux) licensing model to create a harbor for seed sharing outside the commercial sector is both. Excellent, if a bit too long. 4 stars

- Down by the river by Rowan Jacobsen - is about the restoration of the native ecology along the Colorado river near Yuma. Wow!!! What a great success story. 5 stars

- The empathy exams : a medical actor writes her own script by Leslie Jamison - had an interesting premise. I don't care for the style in which it was written. There were a few good points, but they were overshadowed by a lot of dreck. 2 stars

- The deepest dig by Brooke Jarvis - very interesting piece about the deep ecosystem, how we're going to start mining it, & what it means to some of those nearby. I wanted more. 4 stars

- Phineas Gage, neuroscience's most famous patient by Sam Kean - Interesting how one case can be so influential & yet have so few verifiable facts. There are several themes running through this. Well worth reading even though I wasn't particularly interested in the case itself. 4 stars

- At risk by Jourdan Imani Keith - is about minorities in the wilderness. It's a good side of the story to read about, although her effort didn't impress me. It was short, though. 3 stars

- Desegregating wilderness by Jourdan Imani Keith - didn't convince me. I understand her concerns (She's black, female, & originally from the city.) & feels white men are keeping the wilderness for themselves. I think she's right in wanting to integrate more wilderness into the cities, but I don't think any specific sex or race is to blame for not doing it. I'd love it if city people understood the wilderness & country life better. I'm disappointed that she's using her ideals to blame rather than solve in this piece. She does work hard to solve by taking kids out to camp & work in the woods in real life. I guess she does better than she writes, at least to me. 2 stars

- Into the maelstrom by Eli Kintisch - was an interesting look at the scientific community grappling with one small aspect of climate change. It also shows how the popular story can change when politics gets involved. Well worth reading. 4 stars

- The big kill by Elizabeth Kolbert - is about New Zealand's fight with mammals, their determination to exterminate them, & why. I thought our problems with invasive species were bad. Oy! Losing my ash trees, fighting with Japanese honeysuckle, garlic mustard, & multifloral rose are nothing compared to what they're dealing with. 5 stars

- Digging through the world's oldest graveyard by Amy Maxmen - is an interesting look at the trials of archaeology. It also pushes getting the locals involved. 4 stars

- One of a kind by Seth Mnookin - the power of social networking meets the genome project to figure out unique diseases. Unfortunately, it's not a miracle cure & seems to take a lot of money & stature to work it. 3 stars

- A pioneer as elusive as his particle by Dennis Overbye - is an interesting look at Higgs. 3 stars

- Blood in the sand by Matthew Power - conservationism isn't for wimps. This discusses the murder of one guy who tried to save leatherback turtles in Costa Rica. The economic pressures are terrible, though. 4 stars

- Chasing Bayla by Sarah Schweitzer - is about the plight of whales mainly focusing on one man rescuing them from rope. Awful! 4 stars

- Partial recall by Michael Specter - memory is very slippery as are the ethics surrounding healing it. 4 stars

- The city and the sea by Meera Subramanian - is NYC dealing with rising waters & storms, using nature to help stave off issues like hurricane Sandy while cleaning up the environment at the same time. 4 stars

- Curious by Kim Todd - what is curiosity & why does it grip us so tightly sometimes? Not enough science. 3 stars

- The aftershocks by David Wolman - is about Italian scientists being criminally prosecuted for not properly warning people about earthquakes and brings up several important points from misunderstandings (scientists to reporters to population) to expectations. We can't predict earthquakes, yet still the Italian courts convicted scientists of not warning people properly. Yeah, you really need to read this - the dangers of Sunday Supplement science & the general idiocy of our litigious society. 4 stars

- From billions to none by Barry Yeoman - discusses the extinction of the Passenger Pigeon, a fairly well documented case that helped kick off our society's interest in conservation. It was good, but a little too one-sided for me. It briefly mentions a town covered in excrement from the passage of one flock & how they stripped fields, but glosses over these facts while concentrating on how men destroyed them out of greed. 4 stars

Overall, this was a very readable collection. I'm looking forward to getting others in the series eventually.
Profile Image for Biblio Files (takingadayoff).
609 reviews295 followers
August 28, 2015
Anthology season is one of my favorite times of year. It's not just the Best American Series -- there are other collections such as The Best Food Writing, The Best American Magazine Writing, Best Business Writing. And there are anthologies that only last a few years and then disappear such as Best Music Writing, Best Medical Writing, and so on.

I've enjoyed the Best American Series for decades, and my favorite is almost always the Best American Essays volume. But lately I've also been looking forward to the Best American Science and Nature Writing.

This year's collection is guest edited by Rebecca Skloot, author of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. It's heavy on natural sciences and light on physical sciences -- no chemistry, physics, or math here. It touches on astronomy only in passing, in an article about how artificial light is affecting our ability to see the stars (among other things), and a profile of Peter Higgs of Boson fame.

That leaves a lot of room for essays about wildlife, including a fascinating article about crows and other corvids, the spotted hyena, a whale, and more. There are also essays about exploration of deep caves, fossil hunting in Ethiopia, the extinction of passenger pigeons, and a particularly captivating story about open-source seeds as a response to the patenting of some varieties of plants.

My favorites were Atul Gawande's thoughts on the doctor's role in end-of-life care, Michael Specter's essay on the mysteries of memory and forgetting, and Sam Kean's original take on an old topic -- that of Phineas Gage, the man who survived a steel rod through the brain in 1848 with no effects, minor effects, or major effects, depending on who's telling the story.
Profile Image for Jude Li-Berry.
42 reviews11 followers
February 12, 2016
In sharp contrast to the 2014 anthology, which gave sober and much needed critical attention to the pressing issues in the world today, with emphasis on the most pressing -- though perhaps most depressing as well -- issue of them all (climate change), Ms Skloot's edition is determinately light, uplifting, and fluffy, adjectives not quite becoming when it comes to scientific writing. Early in her Foreword, Ms Skloot puts her foot down squarely, by quoting from an email by a reader:

'It seems to me that content (of the series) has become darker and less hopeful over this time... When I marvel at what telescopes have seen... I get giddy. I suppose I would just like to see a bit more wonder -- a bit more magic -- in the content and less doom and gloom.'

It does seem Ms Skloot stands by her foot, or rather, squarely on it, the foot that has been boldly thrust forth thus. In this volume you will find magic, wonder, giddy-worthy account of third-world children awe-struck in electric light brought by modern technology and uppity entrepreneurship. Human ingenuity, in that universal form called Human Adaptive Optimism ('The Collapse of Western Civilization', Oreskes & Conway), once again triumphs, over dark and menacing Reality.

On paper, that is.
Profile Image for Mish.
435 reviews5 followers
May 3, 2021
Overall I would give this collection a 5 star rating. There were only a couple of entries that didn't completely and utterly *GRAB* me and suck me in, but they were still really good once I gave them the brainpower they needed.

But y'all, almost every entry in this collection was really good. It got me excited about science, centered sustainable solutions, and was pretty encouraging, actually, that those "on the ground" are trying to do the right thing. Or the brave thing, if you're a Cave diver.

Anyway, I *Highly* recommend the 2015 collection here.
112 reviews1 follower
May 9, 2022
Some great reads in here, but my favorites are when historical science is updated by new discoveries... from 2015.
Profile Image for Shawn.
252 reviews48 followers
May 22, 2016
I don't consider myself to be a "science person", per se, but I've enjoyed reading this 'Best Of' series the past several years. Some collections are better than other, and within collections there are standout articles, and those easily forgotten. This grouping I found to have more of the "easily forgotten" than in years past. Though varied, the stories started to become indistinguishable from one another. I couldn't tell if this was because they were all similar, or because I'd lost interest in them for similar reasons. Oddly, the most powerful writing comes in two stories by the same author, Jourdan Imani Keith, and both are less than two pages long. She seemed to masterfully execute and understand what so many others in this collection did not -- the idea that less is more.
Profile Image for Dan Martin.
Author 1 book49 followers
December 24, 2015
Okay, so as always, I love this annual collection. And there were some excellent essays in this year's group. 'The Empathy Exams' is at the top of my list for must reads, and as a result, I'll be picking up the self-titled book soon. However, this year's collection felt disjointed to me. It seems that in years past, there's a theme that arcs through the book. This year it was harder to detect, if at all.

That said, this is by far my favorite collection to read every year, I'm forever surprised by the stories and find myself wanting to know more. So bravo the the editors for sifting through the thousands of essays that get whittled down to the two dozen or so that make the cut.
Profile Image for Peter Aronson.
401 reviews21 followers
February 5, 2016
Three and a half stars. Some good articles, but no physics or computer science or much hard science at all.
Profile Image for Andrew Jean-Pierre.
5 reviews
October 15, 2019
This book deserves the "liked it" rating because it doesn't confine you to reading from lowest to highest numbered page, contains diversity within its topics, and catches my attention with some but not all articles.
The table of contents displays a multitude of chapters, each about a different story or experiment. Since none of the contents of one chapter affected my understanding of the other chapters, I could jump around to whatever title seemed the most interesting. Sometimes, I would also feel lazy and not want to read something too lengthy, so I would just locate the shortest chapters and read them first. This made it a little easier to sit down and read since I wouldn’t feel like I had to commit for as many pages.
Furthermore, the different subjects of each chapter made it so I could gain little scraps of knowledge in many areas. This can be useful whenever I feel the need for supporting an argument or opinion that I might have. Having science to pull from would make me sound more credible.
Moreover, some of the themes that surrounded the chapters were quite eye-opening. For example, in the chapter titled No Risky Chances, it talked about how a cheerful woman decided that she would rather be able to decide that she would die in a week and know that it would happen than undertake a risky surgery that had high chances of both succeeding and failing. I always thought that people would choose to take all the opportunities they had to live longer, but this account really hit hard because it clearly displayed that some people would rather know how their story ended. I always found death to be a scary thing but it may not be as scary if you get to decide when it happens.
On the other hand, some chapters were just too long. For instance, The Empathy Exams talked about a medical actor who specialized in being a girl who had conversion disorder. It was engaging for the first ten pages, but after that, it seemed to get a little repetitive. I was just waiting for the chapter to end. I felt like it included too many extra details that weren’t needed on its slow approach towards the conclusion that it made about empathy. Also, I got confused because they went so far in-depth that I started to feel like the author was describing themselves at times when it was actually still part of the girl’s story. I only want to know so much about someone before I get bored with their lives.

A tiny side rant that does not relate to the book a lot but I feel like including anyway:
To be honest, I sort of feel bad for giving this book three stars because I feel like three stars correspond to average. When I am looking at restaurant ratings, I usually associate three stars with what Good reads labels as "it was OK." Instead, Good reads labels the two stars with "it was OK." Within the Good reads system, I feel as if the positive ratings have too many stars to express their meaning. It is unfair that you can just downright dislike a book with no hesitation because it is represented by only one star. Previously, I never noticed that when you hovered over the stars, it says a little snippet of what the star means. This kind of disconnection between the stars and the meaning behind them reminded me of when one of the book's science articles talked about how words like "low," "unlikely," and "improbable" can easily correlate to a variety of percentages of chance depending on each person's definition of the words. (I don't know how to end this rant) *end*
873 reviews14 followers
October 9, 2016
I always enjoy the Best American Series and have spaced out the reading of the collection thru the year. With one more to go I should be just about done when Amazon sets them up in the bargain bin again in December.

A review of the articles in this collection includes

Waiting for Light which tells of how new technology and new marketing efforts are bringing, if not electricity, at least incandescent light to parts of India that have been living sunset to sunrise in the dark even now, in the 21st century.

In Deep is another excerpt from a New Yorker piece about Deep Caving that was featured in a different Best American series this year as well.

A Question of Corvids centers on that species of birds that includes crows, ravens, rooks, and Magpies. Much of the information focuses on the intelligence of crows which is something that has been featured in many media formats recently.

The Health Effects of a World Without Darkness is the first of the very strong articles. Going into the biology of our Circadian clocks and exploring how certain types of cancer are much more prevalent ( when removing for all other factors ) in people who work the overnight shift. An in depth study of the change to human biology from artificial light is needed to explore further. The effect on migratory birds and other members of the animal kingdom are also explored. After reading this red shifted lights become important to learn about.

Spotted Hyenas are featured in a short piece which tells of their violent nature and explores how they sometimes kill for nothing more than the joy of it. Their painful birth process, which is odd indeed is featured as well.

Life, Death, and Grim Routine Fill the Day at a Liberian Ebola Clinic is a featured New York Times article. It is self explanatory but is an excellent piece of writing.

Atul Gawande is one of the best medical writers around. An article from him from Slate titled No Risky Chances speaks to the authors common topic of how to best help our loved ones have the death experience that they want. Very well written and thoughtful.

Linux for Lettuce was a very interesting, as well as maddening article, that speaks to the issue of food and agricultural patents. We meet some academics who have run afoul of the giant food companies such as ConAgra and Momsanto who worry us about the future of food security.

Down by the River addresses the attempted regeneration of the extreme Southern section of the Colorado river. Focusing on the success story of the city of Yuma.

The title story of Leslie Jamison's " The Empathy Exams " was featured when her collection of stories was published. This story features the story of her experience as a medical actor at medical schools as well as her own experience with the health care system through her own abortion as well as heart surgery that no young person expects to have t go through.

The Deepest Dig is a story about Deep Sea Mining and it's coming importance. The dangers to the ocean is touched on as well, dangers that appear to be the potential equivalent of oil drilling near a pristine lake.

A story on Phineas Gage explores the most important person in the history of brain science research. As he survived a horrendous brain injury and thus was available to be studied by scientists no one case has taught us more about the different sections of the brain and their capabilities.

Two very short articles titled " At Risk " and " Desegregating the Wilderness " both center on the need for and the efforts to bring young people from the cities and people of color in general more in contact with the parks and nature areas of the country.

Into the Maelstrom is an article about the battle in the scientific community about one scientists theory of a change in the jet stream. Many of us became familiar with the term polar vortex over the last couple of winters and this article explains the theory that the the warming Arctic is changing the jet stream itself , especially how it moves weather systems across the continents. Many other scientists are in dispute of this idea and the battle has, at times, turned contentious.

The Big Kill was a story about New Zealand the countries efforts to rid itself of invasive species. As no mammals were native to the country this is an attempt to save the islands natural flora and fauna as well as the hundreds of birds which have been jeopardized by small rodents such as stoats and rats. This does not even address those, which are many, that are already gone permanently.

Digging Through the Worlds Oldest Graveyard centers on the efforts of archaeologists efforts in The Great Rift Valley in Ethiopia. I learned a lot and it is a marvel to see how much can be ascertained from the smallest bone fragment and how much effort it takes to extract these items. Again much of the article centers on a publicity hound scientist ruffling the feathers or his more stoic colleagues.

One of a Kind is a New Yorker article that introduces us to parents dealing with the terrible effects of unknown conditions on their children and their efforts to find others with the same symptoms which could, in theory lead to advances to help their children.

A Pioneer as Elusive as His Particle centers on Physicist Peter Higgs as his theory of the unknown particle labeled the Higgs Bosun comes to fruition with experiments in the Hadron Collider. Some pretty heavy science here but very interesting.

Blood in the Sand was a great story about a sad subject, namely the ongoing battle between scientists and nature lovers to protect the breeding grounds of the huge leatherback sea turtles from the encroaching poachers who value the eggs as a way to support themselves. A fight that has actually turned deadly at times to not just the turtles.

Chasing Bayla is another story that follows a scientist trying to preserve an endangered species. Another species that finds man as the one who is threatening it. Right Whales have seen their numbers decimated by hunting but now their deaths often occur as a side effect of the huge fishing and lobstering industry in the East Coast. Known to feed with a their large mouth open they consistently get caught in wires, rope, and other hunting effluent and slowly over a period of months die from infection and or starvation. We follow a scientist who is trying to come up with a way to sedate the whales long enough to free them with mixed results

Partial Recall was published I. the New Yorker and centers on the effort to find a way to reduce the effects of PTSD. Dealing with not the removal of bad memories but the different and new techniques to remove the traumatic feelings associated with said memories is, as one can imagine, a magnet for controversy.

The City and the Sea tells of the harm caused by Hurricane Sandy and the efforts by some to restore the oyster beds around NYC as a way to build a natural buffer to protect from storms.

The Aftershocks is the incredible story of how seismologists in Italy have been tried and convicted of manslaughter for not warning of an earthquake that destroyed a small Italian village and killed many. As one would expect scientists the world over are watching this story and hoping the appeal reverses what they feel would be an incredibly backwards precedent.

From Billions to None was one of many articles written recently about Passenger Pigeons and the short distance between when billions blacked the sky to the time period less than fifty years later in the early twentieth century when the last one died. Hunted to death, habitat destroyed, an incredibly tragic story.






Profile Image for Peter Corrigan.
832 reviews22 followers
May 31, 2022
This is probably the third in this series that I've read. Like any collection, it was uneven but judging by the number of flags I placed on various pages not as good as the others I have picked up (2009 and 2020). The best (but most heart-wrenching) was the tale of seriously endangered Right Whales being strangled by fishing ropes (made out of super-strong high tech fiber) up and down the U.S. east coast. The article on the deleterious effects of artificial light on all sorts of living things was also disturbing. Bird migrations not the least of those effects. 'Partial Recall' by Michael Specter on the nature of memory, it's creation and new methods of tinkering with memories was fascinating. His reference to 'In Search of Memory' by Eric Kandel made an addition to my 'want to read' list. One okay article on meteorology/climatology dealing with the debate on Arctic flow patterns and jet stream blocking but unfortunately focused more on the personalities involved than the science. Also notable was the story of the Italian seismologists who were successfully prosecuted for failing to predict or communicate the earthquake risk before the 2009 L'Aquila quake. Interesting and disturbing at the same time, as the science of risk communication became a big push late in my own career. The best line was 'conventional wisdom tells us that people are terrible with numbers...but we are even worse with words'. Unfortunately agendas of 'wokeism' infected the selection of stories, a trend that is highly likely to increase. At least two (by the same author) had little to do with actual science or nature but were diatribes against racism in the outdoors. Like anyone is prevented from going to a park (on that basis) but reality is never the point of these vitriolic screeds. Hard to believe the celebrated editor thought those stories rated inclusion in the 'best' writing of an entire year, especially as the 'reject bin' listed at the end has numerous candidates that deal with actual science and/or nature.
Profile Image for Jessica.
1,146 reviews17 followers
October 9, 2020
Every selection in this 2015 edition is wonderful. I don't think I could pick a favorite but there's so much of interest not only from a science perspective but from a historical and social impact perspective, too. Selections are weighted a little heavily from a couple publications but it's hard to find fault with that when the articles are, in fact, so good.

Among the topics included in these 26 essays are: effects of light (or lack of) on populations, cave exploration, corvids, hyenas, turtles, whales, passenger pigeons, Ebola, plant patents, river restoration, medical decision making, rare diseases, empathy, curiosity, risk prediction, deep-sea mining, urban wilderness, polar jet streams and Jennifer Francis, New Zealand, hominoid fossils, Peter Higgs, and memory reconsolidation.

It's a lot to take in but think of the good impression you'll make by being well-read. Science!
Profile Image for briz.
Author 6 books76 followers
October 25, 2017
Unfortunately this was a meh collection. It ran heavy on eco and nature, lighter on hard science. The only physics essay (that I can recall) was a bio-essay on Higgs (of particle fame). Even that article felt thin. Nothing on computers or jiggery pokery Internettery, alas.

At its best, this series has blown my mind and opened up my horizons. At its worst (and this 2015 edition was pretty bad), it's just OK. I mean, it's never been BAD. But the disappointment of non-inspiration can be acute. Oh well, obviously I'll read all the other editions I can get my hands on, and I recommend you do too. :)
Profile Image for Andrew Drozdov.
2 reviews53 followers
June 20, 2020
I love this edition of BASNW. Each story has so much to learn from, and two of my favorite are "One of a Kind" about CS Professor Matt Might and the ongoing struggle treating his child with a rare genetic disease, and "Partial Recall" about how memory evolves over time. Of course, the Routine in the Ebola Clinic is incredibly relevant in 2020, and The Empathy Exams draws an excellent distinction between being sympathic and voicing sympathy. I've recommended this one to anyone who would listen, and recently ordered the latest (2019) edition.
Profile Image for Joy Wilson.
261 reviews6 followers
May 20, 2017
Excellent science articles from across the board

I really enjoyed reading this collections due to its wide range of excellent articles. As a science teacher I enjoy writing that enlightens and inspires and this collection certainly does both of those well. I will consider getting each yearly edition to have timely articles for my students and myself to read, discuss, and digest.
Profile Image for Jeffrey.
165 reviews2 followers
January 10, 2018
I am really a sucker for nature essays. I have read this series most years since 2000. The books are curated magazine articles from the prvious year (in this case 2014). I am not sure why I enjoy them more in book form than in the magazines. I think it is because I am more focused when presented as a book. In any case, I find these essays an excellent end of day meditation on the endlessly facinating and rapidly changing developments in Science and the equally important impact on us humans. These essays are alway a riot of ideas and opening each is like unwrapping christmas gifts. This book's topics included rural solar lighting in India (cool!), light pollution, end of life care, plant patents (boo!), medical actors (who knew?) Phineas Gage and lots more. It took a while to read this one, though.
Profile Image for Andy Kristensen.
231 reviews8 followers
July 24, 2018
This book was a rather pleasant surprise- when I first started reading it, I was under the impression that it would be full of dry, dense, and heavily-detailed essays about obscure scientific topics that had little in the way of interesting topics. Instead, many of the articles and essays in this collection are ten times better than the essays found in the annual “Best American Essays” collection. Definitely looking forward to reading the 2016 edition of this series.
100 reviews3 followers
March 2, 2019
I read this series from 2003 on. I looked forward to them every year - saved them for my number 1 vacation read. But over the last few years went from Science and Nature to the sociology of science and nature.
This year I hit the wall. Even more PC stuff (I'm generally liberal politically), even less science. Some of the selections are downright awful and many other clearly filling a PC niche. But again, annoying as some of it is, more enjoyable than not.
Profile Image for Marta Lapczynski.
14 reviews4 followers
December 26, 2020
I love everything published under the umbrella of the Best American series, but this book in particular is without a doubt the most compelling one I’ve read yet. I’m more intimately familiar with the Best American Short Stories publications, but this 2015 edition is the one that convinced me I wanted to shift my focus from Short Stories to Science and Nature. Every single story is just riveting in every way.
Profile Image for Sylvia Snowe.
319 reviews2 followers
November 11, 2022
Ms. Skloot's interest in the ethics of medicine and science research is clearly reflected in this selection of diverse articles. I thoroughly most of them--I tend to skip articles on astrophysics because I have no interest, and the most dreary of climate change and the eradication of species gets to me. But even though I read these articles some eight years after their initial publication, time hasn't diminished their significance and scientific validity.
Profile Image for Chunyang Ding.
302 reviews25 followers
June 7, 2017
Absolutely wonderful anthology. I was glad to see many stories that explored curiosities and fascinations, instead of solely reporting on the very-important-but-often-depressing news of the ways humans are destroying the world. Of special note for me were The Empathy Exams by Leslie Jamison and Curious by Kim Todd.
Profile Image for Alex.
66 reviews5 followers
September 10, 2017
I was disappointed. The books from this series which I have read before had a much stronger focus on explaining scientific facts. This edition seemed to me much more focused on human interest stories, not really explaining complex scientific observations and theories. There were a number of articles in this book which mostly were concerned about the feelings of the author or the protagonists.
Profile Image for Jim.
506 reviews24 followers
November 2, 2016
The "Best American" series remains one of my "go to" series year after year. This year it was Travel and Science. But I usually dip into the different subjects depending on how I feel or what I am interested in reading, I've done Mystery, Non-Required Reading, and Essays in other years. No, you won't enjoy every article but you will, I hope, I think, enjoy many in this collection . I knowI did.
Profile Image for Karen.
446 reviews2 followers
May 10, 2017
I found this collection to be intelligent, thought provoking and with much insightful teaching. The subject matter is eclectic ranging from the push back of our oceans to memory to the justification of killing off species that are running rampant.....completely interesting!!!
57 reviews1 follower
June 28, 2017
As usual, a reliable book to read to catch up on science news I would otherwise miss! Climate change, endangered animals, evolution, invasive plants in New Zealand. The rich variety of great reading about fascinating topics is enlightening and educational.
Profile Image for Bertha.
217 reviews
January 7, 2026
(3.25) An overall well group of Anthology essays and articles around science and nature. And although it is over ten years ago writing, there is still importance of the book and its content; from deep sea mining to the patient Gage history.
Profile Image for Aaron.
372 reviews10 followers
May 15, 2017
I wish there was a little more variety in this collection. Based on this book alone, a reader could conclude that climate change is the only things scientists study and care about.
56 reviews2 followers
August 23, 2017
Educational and inspiring writing. "In Deep" successfully provides a glimpse of caving. The challenges, the danger, the trill of exploring the our deepest caves.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 88 reviews

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