Helpful Score: 4
I loved this book so much that I am scanning for and ordering everything else I can find that Barrett has written. Anyone who loved Lives Of a Cell, Notes Of a Biology Watcher would adore this book. The science is keenly drawn and explained, the historical fiction is richly imagined, and the blend is seamless.
Helpful Score: 4
A beautifully written collection of short stories, loosely tied together by the theme of heroic attempts - and failures- of science to create order out of the chaos that is the natural world. Some of the stories are definitely more riveting than others, but each in its own way quickly pulls you in and keeps your attention. A smartypants literary type read.
Helpful Score: 2
This is a beautifully written books of stories infused with science, nature and history. Intelligently done.
Helpful Score: 1
A collection of short stories mixing historical fiction with science. winner of the National Book Award.
Helpful Score: 1
The six short stories and title named novella are not science fiction, but fiction about science. The first story, 'The Behavior of Hawkweeds,' I found because of a lesson plan on the internet, is about Gregor Mendel, the scientist who stole his work on hawkweeds, and the third scientist who re-discovered Mendel's work. It's also about a retired contemporary professor whose field of genetics has gone past him, and his wife, whose grandfather knew Mendel. 'Ship Fever' is about a young and idealistic Canadian doctor trained in Paris, who goes to an island where the Canadian government is isolating starving Irish immigrants from the Great Hunger who are dying of typhus. There's another story about Linneaus in here and another one where he is offstage, English women are trying to get a way to study with him, but an important part. These are beautiful lonely, sad stories.