Category Archives: Books

Books: “On Becoming a Biologist” by John Janovy

Janovy%20cover.jpgI wish that, many many years ago when I was becoming a biologist, that I could have read this wonderful little book – On Becoming a Biologist by John Janovy! What a little gem!
On the surface, or by looking at the Table of Contents, this slim volume appears to be just yet another in a long line of books giving advice to people who are interested about joining the profession. And sure, it does contain important information about getting accepted into a program, choosing one’s project, teaching, research, publishing, getting funded, giving talks etc. But it is also much more than that. The entire volume is permeated by personal experience and sprinkled with little gems of wisdom. In the end, you realize that biology is not just a profession – it is what you love and, more impportantly who you are, how you define yourself and how you think about the world.
In other words, biology is not what you do but who you are. A biologist is primarily a naturalist, someone who looks at the world and sees the interconnectedness, someone whose primary preoccupations are not politics, economics, entertainment, fashion or money, but the way humans are related to every other living thing on the planet.
Thus, you can earn a living by being a lawyer, clerk or politician, and still call yourself a biologist – never being bored when out in nature, never too engrossed in the business of society to lose sight of the awe and beauty of nature, never too busy chasing money to forget that you and that cockroach you just squashed are distant relatives. It is a worldview more than a profession, being able to see the natural forest for he social trees.
Likewise, you can earn your living doing biology yet not be a biologist. Being good at using a particular technique or solving puzzles makes you a good technician, but without the sense of wonder, without noticing what others do not in nature, you are not really a biologist. If you are more interested in the properties of a protein than in what that protein does in an organism to make it be adapted to its environment, you are a chemist, not a biologist. There is nothing wrong with being a chemist, of course, but this book is about being a biologist. The focus of the biologist’s attention is always the organism. One can study complex ecosystems, or one can study details of molecular biology, but if the organism is not front and center, it is not biology.
A biologist, according to Janovy,

“has, by virtue of his or her interests, the obligation to continually attemp (1) an integration of parts into a whole, and (2) an explanation of the whole in which both the behavior of the whole, and the role of the part, are considered. This manner of thinking is, or at least should be, characteristic of one who considers the function of an organelle relative to the life of a cell, of a cell relative to the life of a tissue, and so forth up to and including the roles of wholeorganisms in the organization of an ecosystem. With this kind of perspective, an average citizen should be able to metaphorically place his or her time on Earth into a context that includes the entire planet and its evolutionary history. A biologist has an obligation to explain, and perhaps promote acceptance of, this metaphor.”

Thus, it is a duty of a biologist to be a public person, a vocal spokesman for the kind of thinking about the world in which the humans are not set apart and valued on their own, but only as one of many parts in a complex system of nature. Part of this loud voice, again according to Jacoby, is the duty of a biologist to strongly and vocally denounce anthropocentric points of view – from Creationism to anti-envrionmental activities – and replace them with a naturalistic worldview in which we play an important part, but are codependent with other organisms in space and time and cannot safely regard ourselves and our societies in isolation from Nature.
This book should be a required reading for every college freshman considering a major in biology. If you have a niece or nephew who appears to ba a “natural” naturalist, this book is a perfect gift for the upcoming holiday season.

Creatures of Accident

You know that I think that Wallace Arthur is one of the sharpest writers on evolution today and that his Biased Embryos and Evolution is one of the best books I’ve read recently on the topic. I just saw that he has a new book out, Creatures of Accident. Has anyone read it yet? Is it good? Just in case, I placed it on my amazon wish list, so, if you think it is worth my while, I can get it once I get hold of some cash.

Thursday is not dead, after all

The%20End.jpgThe snake and the apple tree. The benevolent dictatorship and the tyranny of peer pressure. A floating library and a deadly fungus. The saga of the Baudelaire triplets has come to The End. Some loose ends are tied. Some mysteries remain. The atmosphere is not as treacherous, dangerous and heart-stopping as the previous twelve books, but that comes as a relief! Makes you think more instead of cowering for your life. Even with the final resolution, enough remains open-ended for Snickety to start a whole new series.

This one is for PZ

cephalopod.jpg
(via)

Home: The Blueprints of Our Lives

Home: The Blueprints of Our Lives, new book by Sen.John Edwards hit the bookstores today (I can’t afford it right now but it is on my wish list for later). You can read an excerpt here, check the dates and places for his booksigning tour, see the schedule for his media appearances (lots of them, including The Daily Show and Letterman) here and discuss it here.

Shermer on Evolution

Michael Shermer has an interview in the latest American Scientist on Creationism and his new book Why Darwin Matters.

The Mooney Experience

Just a quick note. I finally got to meet Chris Mooney, my fellow Seed Scienceblogger and the author of The Republican War on Science.
On Saturday, we met early enough to have coffee and a little chat before his book-reading and signing event at Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh. The long weekend in local schools (Friday off in Orange Co. and Monday off in Wake Co.) and a break in bad weather we had recently propably prompted a lot of locals to make that last trip out of town for the year this week, so the size of the crowd was not as impressive as it could have been, but those present were good and asked good questions afterwards.
I have to say that Chris has got his schtick down pat – the talk flows smoothly, is funny and to the point, and pre-empts all the usual protestations before they get to be voiced by anyone in the audience. If he comes to your neck of the woods, by all means go and see him.
His visit (which continues today at Regulator Bookshop in Durham and tomorrow at Duke University) was also an opportunity to just hang out (something I am out of practice with), chat and have a beer with friends who are also (science) bloggers, including Dave Munger,
Reed Cartwright and Tiffany, Abel PharmBoy, etbnc and Anton Zuiker.
Chris was not in a mood for a dinner at an elegant place, so instead we went to a cheep-beer/good-bar-food place, my old grad-school haunts where we stayed until midnight, chatting about science, politics, blogging, journalism, hurricanes (the topic of his next book) and many other things.
Even better, Chris gave us each a CD (“Luckless Pedestrian”) of his brother’s jazz band, the David Mooney Trio. I listened to it today and it’s great.

Republican War On Science comes to the Triangle

Chris Mooney will be in the Triangle for three days – October 28-30th. Come to one of his book-readings:
Saturday, October 28
7:00 PM-8:30 PM
Quail Ridge Books
3522 Wade Ave.
Raleigh, NC 27607
Sunday, October 29
4:00 PM-5:30 PM
Regulator Bookshop
720 Ninth Street
Durham, NC 27705
Monday, October 30th
12 noon-1 PM
“Science Friction: When Science and Politics Collide”
Duke University Medical Center
Duke Center for the Study of Medical Humanities and Ethics
Room 2002, Duke North Lecture Hall
If you want to do more, i.e., meet Chris at some other time/venue, ask me, or even better, ask Abel who is in charge of the schedule.
Note: Bumped to top as the events are coming really close….

Sauron-on-Dog

The Master explains just how deeply flawed the Santorum quip was:
But Aragorn didn’t start the war!
Nothing in Middle-earth happens by accident
a_The%20Eye%20Of%20Sauron.jpg

Sleep in Infants

I tend to rant about sleep in adolescents for various reasons, but other people focus on other age groups. Infants are one such group, interesting because it takes a while for their circadian rhythms to consolidate resulting in “sleeping through the night”.
For years, the only serious book on the topic was Ferber, much maligned for its advice to “let them cry it out”, though the rest of the book is correct and informative. Apparently, there is a good new book on the topic – The No-Cry Sleep Solution: Gentle Ways to Help Your Baby Sleep Through the Night (as well as The No-Cry Sleep Solution for Toddlers and Preschoolers by the same author, Elizabeth Pantley).
Also, Ferber has issued a new edition of his book in which he gives up on the “cry it out” strategy and gives more space to the issue of bed sharing.

Saving Graces

Elizabeth Edwards will be reading from and signing her book in Pittsboro on Thursday at:
McIntyre’s Fine Books & Bookends
2000 Fearrington Village Center
Pittsboro, North Carolina
919-542-2121
Thursday, October 19th at 7:00 p.m.
They’ll have a digital camera set up if you’d like to have a picture taken with Elizabeth. Later, you can download your picture at http://www.myphotowithelizabeth.com.

Tar Heel Tavern #86

A beautifully written edition of Tar Heel Tavern is up on Poetic Acceptance.

Elizabeth Edwards is all of yours’ neighbor, too

a2%20EE%20booksigning.jpgI went to Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh on Monday to hear Elizabeth Edwards read from her new book, Saving Graces (I could not make it to the earlier event in Chapel Hill as I was picking up the kids from school at the time). Quail Ridge Books and the surrounding area can get quite busy when a famous person is coming in to sign books (e.g., when Al Gore and Jimmy Carter came there) so I made sure to come really early. By 6:45pm I have already dropped the kids off at grandma’s yet I still had to make a couple of circles to find a parking space and the bookstore was already full. I’d say there were more than 300 people there, including several familiar faces from OAC and the Wake County Dems.

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Saving Graces

I went to Quail Ridge Books last night. I will post my report (hopefully with pictures and movie-clips) tomorrow at noon.

Biology In Science Fiction

I just discovered (on my Sitemeter referrals list!) a cool new blog – Biology In Science Fiction. Several good posts so far. Go check it out!

Sci-Fi And Building Blogging Communities

Sci-Fi And Building Blogging CommunitiesSome musings from February 13, 2005…

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Edwards and Edwards and Edwards on Oprah

John, Elizabeth and Cate Edwards will appear on Oprah this Wednesday, talking mostly about Elizabeth’s new book, Saving Graces.

Book Reading

Elizabeth Edwards will read from and sign her new book Saving Graces on Monday, October 9, 2006 at 7:30 PM at Quail Ridge Books & Music in Raleigh:

Elizabeth Edwards writes about growing up in a military family, where she learned how to make friends easily in dozens of new schools and neighborhoods around the world, and came to appreciate the unstinting help and comfort naval families shared. Elizabeth Edwards’s reminiscences of her years as a mother focus on the support she and other parents offered one another, from everyday favors to the ultimate test of her own community’s strength–their compassionate response to the death of the Elizabeth Edwards’ teenage son, Wade, in 1996. Her descriptions of her husband’s campaigns for Senate, president, and vice president offer a fascinating perspective on the groups, the great and small, that sustain our democracy. Her fight with breast cancer, which stirred an outpouring of support from women across the country, has once again affirmed Elizabeth Edwards’s belief in the power of community to make our lives better and richer.

What kind of meal should we serve him when he comes?

Michael Pollan, author of “Omnivore’s Dilemma” and other good, thought-provoking books, will be on a speaking tour this Fall. Click on the link for details of your place. He will be in my neck of the woods in October:
October 11, 2006, 7 pm: Chapel Hill, NC; Morehead Planetarium at the University of North Carolina
October 10, 2006, 6 pm: Durham, NC; SEEDS Harvest Dinner
You bet I’ll be there.

War on Science coming near you!

My SciBling Chris Mooney, as part of his book-signing tour, is finally coming my way. So, if you are from these parts and are interested in the Republican War On Science, make sure to check October 28th and/or 29th on your calendar.

Happy birthday, Mother of Frankenstein

Mary%20Shelley.jpgMary Wollstonecraft Shelley was born on August 30th, 1797. She is very old now, but a team of mad scientists is working on resurrecting her with jolts of electricity.

The Best Sneetches on the Beaches

From Thursday, February 16, 2006, another old post in the where did my son get his smarts vein:

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Need help regarding publication of a book

Dr.Predrag Milosevic, an architect from Sarajevo (Bosnia) has written a book “Architecture in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (Sarajevo 1918-1941)”. In it, among else, he writes at length about my grandfather, Dr.Isidor Reiss, who designed and built a number of buildings in Sarajevo between the two World Wars, a few of which are now preserved as cultural heritage of the city, including the first skyscraper in the Balkans.
Graham Foundation in Chicago is ready to fund the publication, but it needs a large reputable publishing house to ask for it, to print it and to publicize it. If such a publishing house is found, then a publisher in Belgrade would also print a Serbo-Croatian language edition. If I understand correctly, the book has been printed in Sarajevo and is used as a textbook at the University there.
Dr.Milosevic, as the author, is precluded from contacting Graham Foundation himself – a publishing house needs to do it in his name. Publication of the book, both in English language in the USA and in Serbo-Croatian language in Belgrade, would mean a lot not just to the author, but also to the architectural world, the University of Belgrade school of architecture and, of course, to me and my family.
Is there anyone reading this blog who has experience with the world of publishing and can make some suggestions?

They think that sex is yucky so they don’t want us to enjoy it

They think that sex is yucky so they don't want us to enjoy it
From January 15, 2006, another good book….

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Oy vey, I am still laughing!

Oy vey, I am still laughing!From December 18, 2005 – a very modern version of Dick and Jane…

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Stephanie Coontz On Marriage

Stephanie Coontz On Marriage You probably know that I am quite interested in the history, current state, evolution and future of the institution of marriage, mainly because it is an important indicator of societal attitudes towards sex and towards gender-relations, which is the key to understanding political ideology. Between May 29, 2005 and February 23, 2006 I frequently mentioned Stephanie Coontz and particularly her latest book – Marriage, A History, e.g., in New History Of Marriage, Stephanie Coontz On Marriage, Op-Ed on the ‘End of Marriage’, Don’t Know Much About History…. and What ‘traditional’ marriage?. Amanda of Pandagon also wrote two good posts about it: Nothing to it and How to save your marriage (or at least give it a fighting chance). While I never really reviewed the book, here is a post with some thoughts and several good links to other people’s reviews as well as her own articles:

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Books: “The Good Father: On Men, Masculinity, and Life in the Family” by Mark O’Connel

The Good FatherIt is great when you write a blog post about somebody, then that somebody shows up in the comments and clarifies his position thus starting an interesting conversation (both in the comments and via e-mail), then you realize that his book-signing tour is bringing that somebody to your town, so you go there and meet that somebody in person and have a great conversation, which inspires you to write yet another blog post – the one under the fold….

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Books: Max Barry’s “Jennifer Government”

Books: Max Barry's 'Jennifer Government'A very brief review from April 17, 2005….

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The Mighty Ant-Lion

The Mighty Ant-LionFirst written on March 04, 2005 for Science And Politics, then reposted on February 27, 2006 on Circadiana, a post about a childrens’ book and what I learned about it since.

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Reading List – American Politics

Reading List - American Politics
I wrote this post on Dec 23, 2004 and posted it both on Science And Politics and DailyKos. Then, on April 03, 2005, I reposted it on my blog again. Many good books have been published since then, but the list would not have changed too much if I have made it today, e.g., I would have replaced E.J.Graff’s book on the history of marriage with much better book on the same topic by Stephanie Coontz, and I probably would have replaced the last two on the list with new books by John Dean and Geoffrey Nunberg on the strength of reviews and what some smart bloggers said, as I have not read them yet (yup, they are on my amazon wishlist….), or perhaps with the Republican War on Science by Chris Mooney. Continue under the fold….

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Gone Organic!

Now you know where I was last night instead of blogging. Local North Carolina wine and local North Carolina cheeses and local handpicked blueberries and local grass-grown beef and local organic potatoes, tomatoes and squash….and discussing “Omnivore’s Dilemma” with the locally grown, organic and sustainable (grass-fed?) science writers of North Carolina.

Turn your blog archives into a book (and sell it)

Turn your blog archives into a book (and sell it)Some ideas from November 17, 2005:

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Books: “Collapse” by Jared Diamond

Books: 'Collapse' by Jared DiamondFirst reviewed on June 18, 2005:

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Favourite Science Books


Holiday Reading: Science BooksWow – this one is old: December 29, 2004. It is in a need of serious updating, not to mention providing amazon links so I can earn pennies if you click and buy. But, it is still a good list nontheless:

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I don’t read descriptions of Harvard Square under various weather conditions, or, review of “Intuition” by Allegra Goodman

Looking at my two yesterday’s posts, one on science fiction and the other on LabLit, together with Archy’s excellent post on history of SF, something, like a hunch or an idea, started to develop at the back of my mind (continued under the fold).

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“Rabies”, the novel

One of the most gripping novels in the “Hot Zone” style I have ever read is “Rabies” (Besnilo) by Borislav Pekic.
The genetically engineered Rabies virus with a double protein envelope becomes extremely easy to transmit (biting is not neccessary any more) and spreads from one victim to another extremely fast. The virus gets turned loose at the London’s Heathrow Airport.
Soon, the airport is closed and quarantined and the (thick long) novel tracks a number of characters stranded at the airport, from scientists trying to figure out what is happening, and physicians trying to help the victims, through airport personel and passengers to a pet dog. Overthe course of a thousand pages, everybody dies. That is, except for the dog who manages to find his way out…
It is an amazingly chilling novel, exceptionally well-written, and predates the whole “Outbreak” genre by at least a decade.
Unfortunately, the book has never been tranlated into English. Now, the widow of the author has started a blog and is posting excerpts from some of his works, all translated into English. You can read the first fourty-five excerpts from “Rabies” on the blog. Here are the first four parts:
Rabies (1st part), PROLOGUE – RHABDOVIRUS,
Rabies (2nd part), PHASE I – INCUBATION,
Rabies (3rd part), PHASE II – PRODROME and
Rabies (4th part), 1./II.
And here is a Google Search which links to all the rest: Rabies
I also hope that the whole book will be translated and published in book form. It would make a killing as one of the earliest, best written, and scariest examples of the genre.
[First posted on April 21, 2006.]

Did A Virus Make You Smart?

Did A Virus Make You Smart?Not really a review of Greg Bear’s “Darwin’s Radio” and “Darwin’s Children” but musing (practically SF itself) on the topic of these books (from April 20, 2005):

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Books: “The Sex Lives Of Teenagers” by Lynn Ponton

After hearing Lynn Ponton on the radio and subsequently writing this, I read her book and wrote a brief comment about it (originally on June 14, 2005):
I recently finished reading The Sex Lives of Teenagers by Lynn Ponton. This interview is probably the best introduction to the book.
As parent of soon-to-be teens, I found the book useful to some extent. It is a series of case-studies – the kind of chatty book so often written by psychologists – a format that makes it easy to read, but leaves one deeply unsatisfied.
My interest is in sexuality of American society and how it affects politics. This book is not it – it rarely, and very obliquely touches on the broader culture. After being impressed with Dr.Ponton when I heard her talk on the radio, I was expecting and hoping for an academic read, full of statistics, and focusing on the Big Picture. I hope she writes one. Soon.

Another Book Meme!

Another Book Meme!June 07, 2005 and another one of those….had to change all my answers so they differ from the previous one!

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What Is Lab Lit?

What Is Lab Lit?From January 30, 2006, a look at the “new” genre and the hype around it…

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Essential Science Fiction

Essential Science FictionWhat is your list of essential science-fiction books? I composed mine back on December 27, 2005 and I still agree with myself on it. Click on the spider-clock icon to see the comments on the original post.

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How to appeal to the Multiple Intelligences of Voters

How to appeal to the Multiple Intelligences of VotersThis review of Howard Gardner’s “Changing Minds” I wrote on July 4, 2004 on www.jregrassroots.org and re-posted it on Science And Politics on August 25, 2004, so the political implications are quite outdated….

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Books: “The Postman” by David Brin – chillingly current…

Books: 'The Postman' by David Brin - chillingly current...This review was first written on April 14, 2005…

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The Book Meme

The Book MemeThis was the first of several book-related memes I did, back on April 05, 2005. Follow the responses of people I tagged as well. And if you have not done this version yet, and you like the questions, then feel tagged and post your answers on your blog…

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Previewing Books on Blogs, and “Institutionalized” by Fred Smith and Joe Schmoe

<a href="Previewing Books on Blogs OK, this is not a re-post of one old post, but three. The first one, from December 17, 2005, introduces Institutionalized. The second one, from January 20, 2006, adds some more info about the book. Finally, the third one, from May 17, 2006, gives a paragraph-long review of the book within a bigger question – what should a blogger do when faced with a stack of books sent kindly by authors and publishers for preview? What should one do if one does not like the book? Under the fold….

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Books: “Coming To Life” by Christiane Nusslein-Volhard

Several ScienceBloggers are reviewing Coming To Life today (see reviews by Janet, Shelley, RPM, Nick and PZ Edit: Razib has also posted his take), each one of us from a different perspective and looking from a different angle, so go read them to get the full scoop.
PZ Myers reviewed the book a few weeks ago. Someting that struck me was that PZ said that the book :

“….assumes nothing more than that the reader is intelligent and curious. Seriously, you don’t need a biology degree to read it!”

…while a reviewer, Edward F. Strasser (a math PhD whose hobby is reviewing books from this angle – how readable they are for laypeople) on Amazon.com states the opposite:

“I don’t think that a person who has never seen this material before is ready for this book, but I think that many people who need it for review will be OK.”

So, when I started reading the book I decided to try to empty my mind of all the knowledge I have and to read it like a complete lay-person. I wanted to see who is right – PZ or Strasser – and try to determine who is the real audience for the book.
First, I have to tell you that I absolutely LOVED the book. And that may be its biggest problem. The book will be appreciated the best by people like me – biologists with expertise in another field who want to brush up on their evo-devo (and just devo) and have an easy reference on the bookshelf. The book does absolutely great for people like that.
But, will it do the same for others? Developmental biologists do not have a need for it because they already know everything in it and 100 times more. But how about complete laymen, people with minimal formal science education but a keen interest in science, people who read popular science magazines, watch Discovery channel and read ScienceBlogs?
I’d say Yes, but very cautiously. In a way, the book is deceptive. Its small size and pretty cover art suggest a breezy read. But it is not. It is a textbook disguised as a non-fiction bestseller. The tone is a matter-of-fact, unexcited monotone. Trying to speed though it will be a disaster. Why?
A textbook on developmental biology would be an expensive, 1000-page, lushly illustrated avalanche of nitty-gritty details. Making the book small by eliminating a lot of that detail means that what remains is highly concentrated. Every sentence matters. Every sentence is a summary of a thousand papers.
There is no “filler” material, e.g., anecdotes and personal stories or interesting examples of, for instance, exceptions to the the rules in a strange species, or philosophical musings, kind of stuff that will let your focus wane every now and then without serious consequences to understanding. Only occasionally she slides in a little bit of history which is always a welcome change of pace on top of being very informative and placing the material in a historical context.
You need to slow down and read every sentence with concentration. Perhaps stop and think what it means every now and then. Sometimes you wish she has NOT omitted some of the details which may serve as a useful illustration of a big principle she is describing in that sentence or paragraph.
Several times I caught her using a technical word without explaining (or at least defining) it first. If you did not have Intro Bio recently, or are not generally well informed on basic genetics and molecular biology, that would throw you off, and make you rush to the back of the book to check the Glossary – something that breaks the flow of reading any book.
So, the book is great for people who have some biology background (at any level) but not much knowledge of developmental biology – people like sophomore biology majors. But how do you get them to slow down and read the book carefully? Well, use it as a textbook! For an Introduction to Development course. I am serious! It’s that good.
The instructor could spend time in class explaining the principles described in the book – a process which slows down the reading of the book. Then, each instructor is free to add as much or as little detail in lectures as the level of the course requires, plus cool examples, flashy images and videos, etc, and add a couple of more readings, e.g., scientific papers and reviews.
Heck, it could be used even for a General Biology class for science majors (e.g., a summer speed class). Genetics, development and evolution are the core of biology, so adding a couple of lectures (with additional notes or a similar book) on physiology, behavior and ecology at the end (and those can be built upon the edifice of genetics, development and evolution covered before), would work just fine in some contexts, eliminating the need for students (like mine, the adults) to buy huge expensive textbooks that only intimidate them with the wealth of detail. It would give the instructor more freedom to design a course well.
Why do I think that this book is better as a potential textbook than the usual texts? Apart from size, price, friendliness and giving the instructor greater freedom, I really like the way the material is explained.
From the very first sentence, and reinforced throughout the book, the message is that the cell is the smallest unit of life. Not genes. Cells. While most textbooks fall into the philosophically untenable habit-of-mind that “genes use cells to make more genes” or “cells are places where genes perform the work of life”, Nusslein-Volhard constantly explains stuff within the proper way of thinking – “genes are tools that cells use to change, to do their job within the organism, and to make more cells”. The shift is subtle. She rarely states it this directly and openly, but if you are reading the book specifically looking for it (as I did), you notice that the word-choice and the way of explainig things is always within this mode of thought. She also, whenever that is appropriate, never forgets to mention important influences of the internal and/or external environment on cells and tfe developing organisms.
The book also makes a gradual progression over levels. After basic introductions to evolution, heredity and molecular biology, she starts with the cell and how it uses genes to change its own and neighboring cells’ properties. As the chapters move on, there is less and less talk of genes and more and more talk of cells, tissues organs and whole organisms, ending with the return to evolution in an excellent chapter on Body Plans.
Understanding that most of the readers will be anthropocentric, she then devotes a chapter to the development and reproduction in those lousy lab animal models – humans.
The final chapter on controversial aspects of developmental biology and its practice – covering stuff like cloning, stem-cell research etc., is as calm and even-tempered (almost dry) as the rest of the book. More importantly, the conclusions given there are derived directly from the science described in the rest of the book, with no Culture-Wars code-words that can trigger automatical resentment on the part of readers that are involved in Culture Wars on one side or the other. Again, it provides the neccessary background that can be useful for a class discussion. And its dry, science-y tone is exactly what is needed for such a discussion.
So, if you are a biologist and you want to refresh and update your knowledge of development really fast and easy – get this book, it is better than any other in this respect.
If you are not a biologist, but have a keen interest and some background, get the book but do not expect to breeze through it in two hours. Do not be deceived by the small size and pretty illustrations Dr.Volhart drew herself. Give yourself a week to read this book, then read it slowly and with full concentration. Read that way, it is worth its weight in gold.
And if you are more interested in the “evo” side of evo-devo and a more future-oriented book (Coming To Life summarizes current knowledge with no speculations about the future), read “Biased Embryos and Evolution” (see my review) – the two books nicely complement each other.
My question to Dr.Nusslein-Volhard: Is it possible to turn Developmental Systems Theory into a useful experimental program and, if so, will that provide discoveries and insights that are lacking within the current paradigm?

Books: “Ira Foxglove” by Thomas McMahon

This is not a re-post. This is a brand new book review.

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Books: “The Wimp Factor: Gender Gaps, Holy Wars, and the Politics of Anxious Masculinity” by Stephen J. Ducat

 FemiphobiaThis is not a real review – I never got to writing it – but it is about a book I mention quite often in my blog posts and think is one of the most insightful about the conservative mindset. Written originally on October 21, 2004:

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Reading Recommendations: Books about Clocks and Sleep

Reading Recommendations: Books about Clocks and SleepThis list, written on December 17, 2005, is still quite up-to-date. There are also some more specialized books which are expensive, and many of those I’d like to have one day, but I cannot afford them (though I have placed a couple of them on my wish list, just in case I see a cheap copy come up for sale):

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Books: “The Cultural Origins of Human Cognition” by Michael Tomasello, part II

CogBlog - Tomasello: Chapter 2 The review of the second chapter was written on September 06, 2005:

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