BOOKS can stretch generosity beyond its breaking point. You set out to buy a
book for someone and end up coveting it. It seems absurd to buy two copies of
the same book鈥攅xpensive, too.
But there is a cure: buy paperbacks. A pair cost roughly the same as a
hardback, so you can afford to treat yourself and a friend. So what鈥檚 on offer
for November? One for bonfire night is Stephen Pyne鈥檚 Fire (British
Museum Press, 拢15.99), the compelling story of how fire has shaped human
history. Pyne is a bit of a specialist鈥攈is other books are Vestal
Fire, World Fire, Fire in America and Burning Bush. Thank goodness
he gave himself a break with The Ice.
Pyne writes about a physical phenomenon that has given birth to a rich
metaphorical language. But biologist Richard Lewontin begins his elegant set of
essays in The Triple Helix (Harvard University Press, 拢10.50)
with a warning about the dangers of metaphor. The physicist鈥檚 鈥減article鈥 isn鈥檛 a
solid, no more than a gene is really a blueprint. He suggests biologists
consider instead what they know of real life. As his subtitle Gene, organism
and environment suggests, he wants to break down artificial borders between
the elements of biology.
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Now consider a seriously quirky book from publishers Carcanet: a journal and
poetry workbook by an astronomer who died recently. Rebecca Elson researched
dark matter, had access to the first Hubble data while at Princeton, and was
also a published poet. A Responsibility to Awe (拢6.95) shows all
these aspects of her life, with a bit of autobiography, notes about her work
half-crystallised into poetry, and the poems themselves.