Mentions
Right on the borderline between fiction and non-fiction, Benjamin Labatut’s When We Cease to Understand the World was the best book I read. I have no idea what being a scientific genius is like, but this conveys a sense of what it *might* be like
- Answered to Any recs on what book I should read tonight?
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My favorite short reads this year:
- Answered to What's the most mind-bending essay, article, or book you've read recently?
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Definitely this 👇
- Answered to What's the most mind-bending essay, article, or book you've read recently?
- From Twitter
This book, finished in the early morning on Dec. 31st, is a prime example of why I don’t make my year end list until the very end of the year. A book that somehow ties my love of reading about physics in with my love of gardening as a metaphor. (The original title was Un Verdor Terrible, which translates to something like, A Terrible Greening.) “This is a work of fiction based on real events,” Labatut writes in the acknowledgements. “The quantity of fiction grows throughout the book.” So, the first essay has only one fictional paragraph, and by the end, it’s all made up, “while still trying to remain faithful to the scientific concepts discussed.” A wonderful way to end the reading year.