The Aspiring Polymath's Society discussion

47 views
General Discussion > Book recommendation

Comments Showing 1-5 of 5 (5 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Rhonda (new)

Rhonda Sturtz | 1 comments The Best Writing on Mathematics 2011 by Mircea Pitici
Excellent book, read the review in New York Journal of Books:
http://nyjournalofbooks.com/review/be...


message 2: by Chrissy (new)

Chrissy (navaboo) This sounds like an incredible book, thanks! I'm reluctant to make it a monthly read, however, as it seems quite hard to find. If I can find a copy somewhere, though, I'll definitely pick it up. Thanks again :)


message 3: by Ian (new)

Ian Danskin On the Origin of Stories: Evolution, Cognition, and Fiction

Not exactly a recommendation, 'cuz I haven't read it yet. But I've been itching to read this one for a bit, and will probably be reading it soon regardless.


message 4: by Adam (new)

Adam I recently read

Supercontinent Ten Billion Years in the Life of Our Planet by Ted Nield

Very interesting book with a rather broad historical overview of Geology.


message 5: by Aaron (new)

Aaron Thibeault (thebookreporter) | 49 comments Just finished reading 'The Violinist's Thumb: And Other Lost Tales of Love, War and Genius, as Written by Our Genetic Code.' It was fantastic (and perfect for the aspiring polymath). It's by Sam Kean (author of the equally spectacular 'The Disappearing Spoon'). His latest book tells the story of DNA--both the story of the history of life (from the smallest, simplest microbe, to we human beings), as well as the story of how we human beings managed to unravel DNA's mysteries (from Mendel, to Morgan, to Watson and Crick, to the Human Genome Project). I've written a full executive summary available at newbooksinbrief.wordpress.com.

Cheers,
Aaron


back to top