Edward Shils’s Portraits: A Gallery of Intellectuals (University of Chicago Press, £14.25/$17.95, ISBN 0 226 75337 9) is good on personal and anecdotal detail about his subjects, all encountered in Chicago, that makes them human instead of celestials. Leo Szilard, for example, a famous nuclear research pioneer, mixed a favourite drink by ordering buttermilk, emptying the sugar bowl into it and then adding sherbet. Szilard is the only scientist in the gallery, but the others are just as interesting. Shils himself, portrayed in a long introduction, matches them.
More from ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ articles
1
Pancreatic cancer halted by virus injection in three patients
2
Glaciers in the 'roof of the world' have suddenly started melting
3
Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything
4
Mathematical AI helps researchers crack 50-year-old problem
5
The best new science-fiction books of June 2026
6
Photons behave very strangely if you try to cut them
7
Q-Day could destroy bitcoin – and our retirement savings
8
How a radical new view of life could reveal its origin – and aliens
9
NASA plans a base on the moon spanning hundreds of square kilometres
10
The Selfish Gene at 50: Why Dawkins’s evolution classic still holds up



