Excellent bit of popular science. Unusual combination of 10,000 ft summaries of major advances in atomic physics over the past century, along with the real world impacts around WWII, and brief but memorable portraits of Rutherford, Planck, the Curies, Einstein (not given an especially privileged role in this account), Schrodinger, Bohr, Heisenberg, Oppenheimer, Pauli, Dirac, Gamow, Meitner, Feynman and the rest. Bizony isn’t above giving us the sex lives of Marie Curie, Einstein, Schrodinger and Feynman; the politics (generally balanced and interesting - spoiler alert - Bohr comes out of it well, Heisenberg not so much); misogyny, anti semitism and academic theft (step forward the villain Otto Hahn at the expense of Lisa Meitner); but mainly the history of the ideas from Planck to todays speculations about the beginning, and end, of the universe. The final chapter was the hardest for me to follow but still interesting. I’m impressed at how much ground Bizony covers in a short book, but especially how he can discuss such dazzlingly complicated ideas (without pretending that a general reader will *understand* quantum mechanics and the rest after reading a narrativised summary such as this) in persuasive, enjoyable prose.