Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Dead Dogs and Radium Girls

The Poisoner's Handbook by Deborah Blum

May 5, 2019 by CoffeeShopReader Leave a Comment

The Poisoner’s Handbook is one of those rare non-fiction books that reads more like fiction. The basic narrative follows the head medical examiner of New York City and his chief toxicologist as they essentially help invent forensic science during Prohibition. Each chapter focuses on the problems, mostly murders, that revolve around a particular chemical compound including chloroform, wood alcohol, arsenic, radium, carbon monoxide, and thallium. There’s a lot of chemistry involved but it’s explained in a way that someone who hasn’t taken the subject since […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #history, alexander gettler, charles norris, chemistry, deborah bloom, forensic science, legal history, murder, New York City, prohibition, the poisoner's handbook

CoffeeShopReader's CBR11 Review No:26 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, History, Non-Fiction · Tags: #history, alexander gettler, charles norris, chemistry, deborah bloom, forensic science, legal history, murder, New York City, prohibition, the poisoner's handbook ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

In Which I Learned A Lot More About Chemistry Than I Ever Did In School

April 20, 2018 by Becky with the good flare 1 Comment

First, a confession. I attended four different middle schools and three different high schools. I managed to take Earth Science, Environmental Science, and then Biology five times over before pursuing a liberal arts degree. I never learned much of anything about chemistry in school, so that bar may be artificially low. The Disappearing Spoon by Sam Kean is a wandering, at times rambling, collection of stories that winds along with the Periodic Table of Elements. Like a good liberal arts science class, the book does […]

Filed Under: History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: chemistry, history, Non-Fiction, pop science, science, Seam Kean

Becky with the good flare's CBR10 Review No:2 · Genres: History, Non-Fiction · Tags: chemistry, history, Non-Fiction, pop science, science, Seam Kean ·
· 1 Comment

If Sam Kean had been around when I went to school, I might have majored in Science

October 22, 2017 by KimMiE" Leave a Comment

I’m not sure at what point in my adult life I decided I love science, but if I had been able to read books by Sam Kean when I was in school, I might have come to this conclusion at a much younger age. Then again, I think the interest has always been there (at one point I thought I would be a zoologist, because I liked animals), but the knowledge didn’t seem accessible to me. Whether it was because I was a girl and […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: astronomy, cbr9, chemistry, KimMiE", Sam Kean, science

KimMiE"'s CBR9 Review No:20 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: astronomy, cbr9, chemistry, KimMiE", Sam Kean, science ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

A solid series of newish books

October 3, 2017 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

The Book of Unknown Americans – 4/5 stars I liked this book a lot and I really thought I was going to….well not not like it, but find it mediocre or something like that. I am not sure why I thought this, and well, I should probably explore that and really don’t want to at the same time. The book is told from many voices; almost all recent, first, or second generation immigrants from Mexico and Latin America. The voices range in scope and circumstance, […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Fiction Tagged With: candace millard, chemistry, Christina Henriquez, Emily Fridlund, history of wolves, The Book of Unknown Americans, The river of doubt, Weike Wang

vel veeter's CBR9 Review No:398 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Fiction · Tags: candace millard, chemistry, Christina Henriquez, Emily Fridlund, history of wolves, The Book of Unknown Americans, The river of doubt, Weike Wang ·
· 0 Comments

Come for the Science; Stay for the End Notes

July 8, 2017 by KimMiE" 4 Comments

Sam Kean is my favorite science writer, for a few reasons. For one thing, he is a complete mad man about research. In chapter 2 of The Disappearing Spoon, Kean records the longest word in the English language. This champion of all English verbiage turns out to be a word that describes a protein on the first virus ever discovered and measures 1185 letters. (I’m not going to record it here because proofing that shit would take up the rest of my day.) What impresses […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: chemistry, KimMiE", Non-Fiction, Sam Kean, science

KimMiE"'s CBR9 Review No:13 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: chemistry, KimMiE", Non-Fiction, Sam Kean, science ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments
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