8 June 2008

Greenfield book coverSusan Greenfield knows a lot about prunes and has some unexceptional views about umbrellas, as this review for the Telegraph explains…

 

 

 

18 May

Fernyhough book coverHow do you write about somebody who isn't there yet? Charles Fernyhough's biography of his daughter covers the first three years of her life. I reviewed it for the Sunday Telegraph, and Fernyhough picked up the discussion on his website.

 

 

19 April

Cover image of John Manning's The Finger BookThe Finger Book is John Manning's first stab at an evolutionary history of race. It's vital stuff – but why so poorly expressed?

 

 

 

 

11 April

Summerscale book cover'British crime fiction did not grow out of the Saville Kent murder case; it ran away and hid from it.' Kate Summerscale's The Suspicions of Mr Whicher is reviewed in the Telegraph.

 

 

 

Physics of the Impossible cover'The art of writing popular science is the art of satisfying the curiosity you have piqued.' Michio Kaku's supercilious handwaving really gets my back up in this Times review.

 

 

 

8 April

Still from Strangeness of SeeingA new series of short avant-garde films which aims to capture the strangeness of seeing reminds us that directors are always playing games with our eyes.

 

4 April

Chinese dissident poet Shi TaoA poem written by the imprisoned Chinese journalist Shi Tao is following the Olympic torch around the globe…

 

 

25 March

guardian1A consortium led by the University of Plymouth has won a £4.7m grant to teach a humanoid robot named iCub how to speak English. Let's hope it grows into a sociable little thing. The bald fact is, we need him.

 

 

15 February

Sennett's The Craftsman

'Philosophy, however pragmatic and politically engaged, proceeds through language. Much else that we are, and can be, and should be, has nothing to do with words.'

This review of Richard Sennett's The Craftsman appeared in The Times.

 

6 February

Vision, guesswork and lies: listen to the Telegraph interview.

 

5 February

This from The Bookseller:

'Peter Tallack, literary agent and director at Conville & Walsh, is leaving the company after six years to set up his own operation. The new agency and consultancy, to be launched next week, will be called The Science Factory and will focus on popular science. Most of Tallack's authors at Conville & Walsh, who include Ian Stewart, Arthur I. Miller, Paul Parsons, Paul Mason and Simon Ings, intend to join him in his new venture.'

 

3 February

Du Sautoy – Finding Moonshine

'Death, more often than not, has twenty faces.'

Du Sautoy's latest mathematical entertainment is reviewed in the Independent on Sunday.

 

 

1 February

The New Weird book cover

Ann and Jeff Vandermeer have very generously included an old story of mine, The Braining of Mother Lamprey, in their new anthology.

 

 

 

19 January

The Canon book cover

'The New York Times science journalist Natalie Angier has written an introduction to science. All of it. At once.'

Read this Telegraph review of The Canon: the Beautiful Basics of Science.

 

 

19 January

Consider this:

today1

'The FBI's data-sharing proposals, involving an entire suite of biometric data, are directed at catching major criminals and terrorists. The name the Feds gave this project, however, suggests that someone, somewhere, is looking to the future: "server in the sky".'

 

 

OLD NEWS

September 2007

The Telegraph had me review two excellent books about numbers: One to Nine by Andrew Hodges and The Tiger that Isn't by Michael Blastland and Andrew Dilnot.

On ABC Radio National's Book Show, Kirsten Garrett talked to me about The Eye: a Natural History.

May

I reviewed Unknown Quantity: a Real and Imagined History of Algebra by John Derbyshire for the Telegraph.

March

Art and synaesthesia rub shoulders in this article for Dazed Digital.

The Guardian ran this comment piece on colour perception.

In the run-up to publication day, the Independent ran a short catalogue of visual surprises mentioned in The Eye.

item1a

My agent is Peter Tallack at The Science Factory,

2 Twyford Place
Tiverton
Devon
EX16 6AP
info@sciencefactory.co.uk

If you want to contact me directly, write to info@fisheye.demon.co.uk

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