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Rethink
Rethink
Oct 27, 2024 9:15 AM

Author:Steven Poole

Rethink

‘Clever and entertaining.’ Sunday Times

‘Elegantly written and full of surprises.’ Daily Telegraph

‘Always entertaining and often eye-opening.’ Financial Times

Old ideas that were mocked or ignored for centuries are now storming back to the cutting edge of research and informing the way we lead our lives. In Rethink, Steven Poole explains why today’s chess grandmasters, quantum physicists and psychologists are mining the last 2,000 years of history for answers to the problems of the present. He explores how long-neglected thinkers could transform our everyday lives: from improving the way boardrooms operate, to inspiring grand projects for social and political change. And above all, he shows that by rethinking discarded ideas we can each gain a better understanding of the world – and perhaps be better equipped to change it.

‘A whirlwind of discovery … Among the greatest compliments you can give a book is that it helps you to see things differently.’ Guardian

‘When it comes to describing a complex idea clearly, Poole is one of the best writers around.’ Sunday Times

‘Fascinating … Poole confirms his standing as one of our liveliest and most thought-provoking writers on science and technology.’ Spectator

Reviews

Entertaining and important … Elegantly written and full of surprises

—— Daily Telegraph

Clever and entertaining … when it comes to describing a complex idea clearly, Poole is one of the best writers around.

—— Sunday Times

Always entertaining and often eye-opening

—— Financial Times

Fascinating … Poole confirms his standing as one of our liveliest and most thought-provoking writers on science and technology.

—— Spectator

Steven Poole’s book is full of fascinating stories … It’s a treasure trove for people who like to begin stories with “Did you know that…?”

—— The Times

It is testament to the author’s narrative skill that this whirlwind of discovery doesn’t end up in a pile of papers scattered across the floor … Among the greatest compliments you can give a book is that it helps you to see things differently.

—— Guardian

For those interested in influencing change, whether in business, science or culture, Poole’s perspective is an invitation to reexamine the discarded or discredited as part of today’s – and tomorrow’s – creative mix.

—— J. P. Morgan Summer Reading List

Rethink is a book that both informs and makes the reader think and rethink (and occasionally argue with the author). It’s even fun . . . I consider that a winning combination.

—— ValueWalk

[A] fascinating compendium of new ideas that aren't new at all

—— New Statesman

Shows what we can learn by considering obsolete ideas from a new perspective

—— Guardian Science Podcast

Poole has enlightening things to say

—— Times Literary Supplement

The One Device is a tour de force. Brian Merchant has dug into the iPhone like no other reporter before him, travelling the world to find the untold stories behind the device’s creation and to uncover the very real human costs that come with making the iPhone. Packed with vivid detail, the book carries the reader from one unexpected revelation to the next with a fast-paced edge and heaps of analytical insight.

—— Ashlee Vance, New York Times bestselling author of Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future

This is a stunning book—a comprehensive, fascinating, and compulsively engaging account of how the most revolutionary product of our age was invented. Brian Merchant sets off on a journey around the globe, from design studios in California to mines in South America to factories in China, to tell the human stories—the ruined marriages, the lost lives—behind this iconic device. You will never look at your iPhone the same way again.

—— Dan Lyons, author of Disrupted: My Misadventure in the Start-Up Bubble

Brian Merchant has written a fascinating biography of the iPhone, the most important single product ever created. If you’ve ever looked at the glowing screen in your hand and wondered where the hell it came from, this book provides rich, unexpected, and unusually sophisticated answers.

—— Alexis Madrigal, author of Powering the Dream: The History and Promise of Green Technology

Compressing decades of competitive invention and behind-the-screen intrigue, Brian Merchant looks deep into the black mirror of the iPhone to tell us the prehistory—and cultural future—of Apple’s addictive device. This is the true science fiction of our time: how everyday experience was reinvented by a gadget.

—— Geoff Manaugh, New York Times bestselling author of A Burglar’s Guide to the City

A wild ride.

—— San Francisco Chronicle

Hello World is an illuminating book on the ethical issues around data. Mathematician and presenter Hannah Fry leads us through the not-too-distant worlds of AI politics, healthcare and culture, probing the complex roles of data and algorithms through a range of eye-opening examples. ‘AI’ is a much-used but oft-misunderstood term, and here Fry lays out its impact with ease - 'Best Books of 2018'

—— WIRED

Top science writing

—— Evening Standard

She is doing to maths what Brian Cox has done for physics

—— The Times

Hannah Fry is quickly becoming the David Attenborough of maths.

—— Guy Kelly , Telegraph

Dazzling... There is nothing about Gene that is less than nuanced.

—— Sathnam Sanghera , The Times

A magnificent synthesis of the science of life, and forces all to confront the essence of that science as well as the ethical and philosophical challenges to our conception of what constitutes being human

—— Paul Berg, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Wise and lucid...excellent

—— Andrew Marr , BBC Radio 4 Start the Week

A tourist guide to the new Africa, the human genome… Mukherjee gives an exhaustive account of the development of the modern science of inheritance… Mukherjee does a good job of cutting away the web of ambiguity and complexity’

—— Steve Jones , New Statesman

Written with the rollicking enthusiasm of sports journalism… Mukherjee has an ear for his subject’s rhetorical brilliance.

—— Andrew Solomon , Guardian Weekly

Meticulous… Carefully constructed, deliberate prose.

—— Sumit Paul-Choudary , Literary Review

Makes a compelling case that our ability to harness the medical benefits of genomic science while avoiding its hazards promises to be among the defining challenges of the 21st century.

—— Andrew Ward , Financial Times

Mukherjee has done readers an admirable service, by turning one of the most important scientific sagas – arguably the most important – in history into a tale that is too good not to know

—— Globe and Mail

Rather wonderful book… All-encompassing and eye-opening and moving and amusing, at times, and endlessly fascinating and truly brilliant… As long as intelligent, empathetic, thoughtful people like himself are to the forefront, it should turn out alright.

—— Darragh McManus , Irish Independnet

An accessible and beautifully written overview of the complex field of genetics by the Indian-born doctor. It’s compellingly personal and provocative, too.

—— Telegraph

Mukherjee views his subject panoptically from a great and clarifying height, yet also intimately.

—— James Gleick , Scotland on Sunday

Dr Mukherjee uses personal experience to particularly good effect… He writes tenderly.

—— The Economist

[A] Magisterial historical survey.

—— Philip Ball , Chemistry World

Mukherjee has a gift for making gripping, vivid narrative out of the cataclysmic but largely invisible drama of molecular biology.

—— Lev Grossman , Time Magazine

Compelling

—— Stuart Ritchie , Spectator

Fascinating, complex and accessible.

—— Anna Carey , Irish Times

Intimate, insider’s account of the role that genetics.

—— Nilanjana Roy , Financial Times

A tourist guide to the twenty-first century’s uncharted continent, the human genome... Gives a full and lively account of the development of the subject... He has talked to many of the main players and gives deep insights into their moments of discovery... Mukherjee does a good job of cutting away the web of ambiguity and complexity that scientists have woven.

—— Steve Jones , New Statesman

A daring and highly personal voyage into the future of genetic research

—— Vogue

The Gene’s dominant traits are historical breadth, clinical compassion, and Mukherjee’s characteristic graceful style… Mukherjee writes eloquently

—— Nathaniel Comfort , Atlantic

A fine read, with many fine stories.

—— David McConnell , Irish Times

[It is] accessible and beautifully written… It’s compellingly personal and provocative, too.

—— Daily Telegraph

The Gene is a staggeringly impressive piece of writing… [It] takes us on a fascinating journey through the world of genetics… Written with a clarity that brings the most complex concepts to life… An accessible, gripping and thought-provoking read. In short, this book is a masterpiece and you should read it.

—— Jamie Durrani , Chemistry World

An essential read.

—— Mail on Sunday

Inspiring and tremendously evocative

—— San Francisco Chronicle

A fascinating read

—— Hugh Jackman

You may think this book is not for you. Thing again… My only caution would be not to recommend it to too many people… So whether you’re a teacher or parent attempting to inspire…or you simply want an erudite anecdote, this book is for you. It’s a dazzling example of scientific story-telling and definitely my book of the year.

—— Cath Murray , School's Week

An epic 150-year, 500-plus page journey of genetic discovery… [An] excellent and authoritative account.

—— Charalambos Kyriacou , Times Higher Education

This is a brilliantly readable celebration of the science and scientists who have transformed out understanding of what it means to be human.

—— Nick Rennison , Daily Mail

The Gene is a truly impressive achievement… Mukherjee has created a masterwork of the history of the gene and its study. In this popular science book, scientist and non-scientist readers alike will feel they have a true understanding of the history, biology and ethics of genetics.

—— Bio News

He deftly lays out a history of the gene… One of the great science books of the decade with an engagingly enthusiastic personality at its heart.

—— Saga Magazine

[A]superbly written tale.

—— Stephen Meyler , RTE Guide

Mukherjee writes with clarity and passion… This should prove a fascinating read for anyone interested in understanding how far the study of the gene has taken us, particularly with respect to medicine, and where the future may lie.

—— Emma McConnell , Pharmaceutical Journal

Ambitious and honest, The Gene sheds light on both our past and future.

—— Kitty Knowles , Memo

Mukherjee’s text brims with potential… Surely The Gene has to be the new bible for a new generation of aspiring biologists, biochemists and, frankly, thinking people? So whether you’re a teacher or parent attempting to inspire a reluctant teen to get excited about science, or you simply want an erudite anecdote, this book is for you. It’s a dazzling example of scientific story-telling, and definitely my book of the year.

—— School's Week

If you want a good overview of the history of the gene, you can’t go wrong starting here.

—— Paul Cheney , Nudge

A provocative and engaging [read].

—— Independent Nurse

Mukherjee’s prose tends to be lavish, but this befits the weighty topic, and his explanatory style is clear yet enveloping… Compelling scientific and medical storytelling… A spectacular effort from an author I hopes has plenty more tales to tell.

—— Euan Ashley , Lancet

An essential guide to biology.

—— Gentleman's Journal, Book of the Year

A brilliant, chunky, study of genes.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

This book captures the progression from that intuitive sense of genetics to its birth as a veritable science and, for better or for worse, its evolution into a powerful tool… The book ends not with a conclusion, but with a feeling of anticipation… In many ways, The Gene is a call for caution and for a thoughtful consideration of the possibilities that progress may bring… When genes become tools, what will those tools be used for? As we try to answer that question, Mukherjee’s book asks us to carefully look back before we continue to move forward

—— Claire McDaniel & Daniel Marchalik , British Medical Journal

A comprehensive – and gripping – history of the gene

—— Emma Finamore , Memo
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