NONFICTION
Released: April 23, 2013
"This is a work as much of philosophy as science. Despite the absence of mathematics, it requires close attention, but readers who make the effort will absorb a flood of ideas from an imaginative thinker."
A distinguished physicist delivers a thoughtful, complex re-evaluation of the role of time in the universe.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 23, 2013
"An informative, witty, provocative meditation on the mind–brain paradox."
A neurologist criticizes the emerging new language that attaches the prefix "neuro" to economics, linguistics, marketing and attempts to explain market crashes by fMRI brain scans.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 22, 2013
"Sure to inform and delight nature lovers."
Essayist and former
Metropolis contributing editor Busch (
Patience: Taking Time in an Age of Acceleration, 2010, etc.) shows how ordinary people can play an important role in protecting the natural environment simply by "paying attention" to the creatures around us.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 21, 2013
"A fascinating though occasionally crotchety scholarly presentation of the relationship among biology, genetics and culture. May be difficult going for some general readers."
Lieberman (Emeritus Linguistics/Brown Univ.;
Toward an Evolutionary Biology of Language, 2006, etc.) examines the unique creative potential of the human brain.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 16, 2013
"Readers will forgive Switek's detours into cuteness and bad jokes in exchange for a genuinely informative introduction to his favorite subject."
A dinosaur lover since childhood, science journalist Switek (
Written in Stone: Evolution, the Fossil Record, and Our Place in Nature, 2010) chronicles his travels through North America visiting scientists, museums and fossil beds while delivering an enthusiastic account of the history, description, discoveries, ongoing controversies and inaccurate media obsession with these popular but extinct creatures.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 16, 2013
"A disappointing rehash of the science-vs.-religion debate."
An emeritus professor of physics and astronomy traces the roots of modern science, including the discovery of the Higgs boson, to the materialist Greek and Roman philosophers 2,500 years ago.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 16, 2013
"Mostly stimulating and inventive."
Architect McDonough and chemist Braungart (co-authors:
Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things, 2002) tender both an attitude and a strategy for a better-designed world.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 15, 2013
"Glows with one man's love for science."
The eminent entomologist, naturalist and sociobiologist draws on the experiences of a long career to offer encouraging advice to those considering a life in science.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 9, 2013
"An intriguing study encompassing "a convergence of disciplines ranging from population ecology and animal behavior to genetics, molecular biology and biophysics.""
How differences in coloration within a species reveal new dimensions in the operation of natural selection.
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NONFICTION
Released: April 9, 2013
"A timely call to attention to a global health problem, but with no real solutions in sight."
The story of "where attitudes about chronic illness came from, and where they stand today."
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INDIE
Released: April 8, 2013
"An insightful treatise on the intersection of faith and science for believers and nonbelievers alike."
NONFICTION
Released: April 4, 2013
"An intriguing ride through "all the wondrous quirks and oddities in human nature.""
In this often heady blend of science, philosophy and sociology, Simons (Univ. of California Graduate School of Journalism;
Darwin Slept Here: Discovery, Adventure, and Swimming Iguanas in Charles Darwin's South America, 2009) tries to get at the root of fandom, that sometimes appalling display of irrational behavior, which appears to be "a species-level design flaw."
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