Pages: 288 (Hardcover) ISBN: 1857028503 Pub: Fourth Estate Pub date: 2005-09-05 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 234288
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Reader Reviews:Out of this world (0/0 people found this helpful)Read on a train trip to Torquay, this was a delightful meander through the Solar System. Snippets of information, entertaining tangents, flights of fancy...all perfect for those wanting to read something escapist and interesting but probably a nightmare to the 'shoes in a strait line' scientific reader. This is not the book for you if you want to know the specific gravity of Io or if you need to calatlogue the rotation speeds of Neptune's moons.
Fact, Context and Wonder (0/0 people found this helpful)I started to read this book because I wanted to have a brief summary of what is known about the planets in our own solar system and because I had enjoyed "Longitude" by the same author. Sobel succeeds in her task by taking a well-worked subject and finding a new angle with which to approach it. In this book she has each chapter based around a planet but selects a different entry point to the topic each time, through for example an imagined letter from one of the characters involved at the times of discovery or through poetry or ancient myths. This approach is fresh and lively but at the same time is a vehicle by which to introduce just enough facts about each planet to be informative. For those who want a more detailed presentation of astronomy this book is not the one; in fact I could imagine it irritating some readers as it flirts with the mystical awe of the solar system as well as presenting the scientific knowledge available. However, if you want an interesting mix of fact, historical context and a glimpse of wonder in an engaging style then "The Planets" provides a perfect read. The Planets - A Pulpit's View (1/1 people found this helpful)As someone who'd thoroughly enjoyed 'Longitude' I'd greatly anticipated reading Dava Sobel's take on our extended home. Not that new scientific revelations had been expected, no, but simply a well-written and entertaining new slant on what countless Horizon programmes and suchlike had already amply illustrated in recent years.
A gem (0/2 people found this helpful)How I wish I was Dava Sobel. When someone manages your thoughts with such clarity, it's spooky and hypnotic. How boring is it to read a drone about planets? Not here - Dava just drips out an image and it lands on your mind "plop". In a matter-of-fact explanation of the moon eclipsing the sun, she writes: "At totality, when the Moon is a pool of soot hiding the bright solar sphere....". I could tell you better lines but this morning, I loved that one. I'm on my third reading of her book but I mainly just read Lunacy (her chapter on the moon) over and over again - it has me floating. Dava stimulates such emotion around the wonderment of creation; it almost feels like a religion. Journey through the solar system (5/5 people found this helpful)
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Books -> Subjects -> Science & Nature -> Astronomy & Cosmology -> Astronomy -> Popular Astronomy
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