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The Guardian, October 2004
Singh's brazen use of the actual science is a useful for two
reasons. First, it affords a respect to the reader so often
missing from "wow, isn't science cool?" books and shows
exactly what the scientists of yesteryear were dealing with
when they came up with their ideas. Second, it shows science
for what it is: ideas, arguments and, ultimately, the
consensus of the establishment.
Everyone knows what the big bang is - or so they think -
but this seemingly simple idea is the result of centuries of
impassioned disagreement. The politics, the ideas dismissed by
the establishment as heresy and, above all, the personality
clashes between leading scientists are laid bare - as is the
creativity ingrained in the subject. And, as Singh shows,
coming up with a theory of how the universe began is possibly
the most creative thing of all.
The Herald, October 2004
Simon Singh’s new book, Big Bang, should
be warmly welcomed. Singh made the publishing world sit up and
take notice when his debut, Fermat’s Last Theorem, became the
first book about mathematics to make the best-seller lists.
With Big Bang, he has turned his attention to the origins of
the universe, and writes so clearly about it that the layman
can breeze straight through, easily grasping each step on the
way.
Daily Telegraph, 16
October 2004
Following his study of mathematical
ingenuity in “Fermat’s Last Theorem” and of cryptography in
“The Code Book”, Simon Singh comfortably bestrides the
universe in “Big Bang”, encompassing time and space in a
sweeping historical narrative of the scientific imagination at
work. But he also gives science a deeply humanistic, humorous,
down-to-earth spin.
This is an epic tale brilliantly told, packed with courage and
tragedy, heroes and martyrs, with one or two jokers in the
pack.
[Click here for the full review]
The Independent on
Sunday, 24 October 2004
Simon Singh’s book, a history of the
evolution of the [Big Bang], begins with Eratosthenes, who, in
about 200 BC, stuck a stick in the ground and used the
resulting shadow to work out the circumference of the earth,
using one of the stunning examples of lateral thinking in
history… Singh is a very gifted storyteller who never misses
the chance to make his subject clearer or more entertaining…
Singh is also fastidious about crediting the true pioneers of
science. We learn, for example, of the team of brilliant women
‘computers’ who were brought in to analyse celestial
photographs at the Harvard College Observatory. One of these
women, Henrietta Leavitt, made one of the most important
breakthroughs in 20th century astronomy. She would have been
nominated for a Nobel Prize, if she hadn’t died in obscurity.
[Click here for the full review]
Sunday Telegraph, 24
October 2004
With Simon Singh there is no beating
around the bush. His previous books, Fermat’s Last Theorem and
The Code Book, took apparently arcane and inscrutable subjects
and cracked them open for the general – and generally
innumerate – reader, to reveal whole histories of human
thought and feeling. In his new book he tackles life, the
universe and everything head on, with equal relish … Singh’s
unerring eye for picturesque anecdote and his capacity for
simplifying complex scientific ideas is a winning formula.
… Along the way, Singh uses beautifully simple analogies and
clearly explained diagrams to enable even the most
mathematically hobbled of us to recapitulate the history of
man’s intellectual engagement with the dark spaces around him.
For the reader, the effect is like walking on water. We know
that there are any number of difficult equations squirming
below, but led by the hand so charmingly by Singh, we suddenly
find ourselves on the other side, apparently understanding it
all.
[Click here for the full review]
Daily Mail, 24 October
2004
The great debate between the Big Bangers
and Steady Staters forms the centrepiece of Simon Singh’s
book. Readers of Singh’s two previous books, on Fermat’s last
theorem and the history of code-breaking, will know he is a
gifted expositor, ready to venture to places other science
popularisers don’t even try to reach. Here he uses his powers
to put the Big Bang debate in context, laying out the history
of cosmology and explaining the details of the theories behind
the headlines.
… Anybody who wants to understand this wonderful achievement
will not do better than start with Singh’s book.
Economist, 4 November
2004
For a
comprehensive yet eminently comprehensible account of how
cosmologists pieced together the history of the universe, turn
to the latest book by Simon Singh, a British science writer
best known for his bestselling account of the solution of
Fermat's last theorem.
From the
Greeks to Einstein, through Copernicus and Newton, Mr Singh
deftly places brick upon brick, building up to the modern Big
Bang theory and its observational verification with the
discovery of its afterglow, the “cosmic microwave background”.
The
book's broader theme is the working of science itself, and how
new theories are proposed, challenged, tested and then
accepted or discarded. This is particularly instructive given
the religious overtones of the cosmological debate.
Many of the stories are
familiar, but as in his previous books, Mr Singh explains even
the most complicated ideas with subtlety, grace and wit. His
explanation of relativistic time dilation, which causes
fast-moving clocks to appear to be running slowly when viewed
by a stationary observer, is exemplary.
[Click here for the full review]
Daily Mail, 26 November
2004
Roll up
for the greatest story ever told! It is an adventure story,
and one of the great ones.
If you are intrigued
by the story but wary of mathematics, do not worry; Simon
Singh spares us most of the maths, and he juggles big ideas
with tact and care.
[Click here for the full review]
Publishers Weekly, December 2004
Singh recounts in his inimitable
down-to-Earth style how the Big Bang theory triumphed. There
is no better account of the Big Bang theory than this.
New
Scientist, 4 December 2004
“Death
is an essential element in the progress of science,” Simon
Singh writes, “since it takes care of conservative scientists
of a previous generation reluctant to let go of an old,
fallacious theory and embrace a new and accurate one.” Which
is good for the reader, because the history of the Big Bang
theory is peppered with animosity, arrogance, harsh debates
and unexpected triumphs.
In his
highly readable book ‘Big Bang’, Simon Singh races through the
history of the search for a scientific creation theory … Singh
brings the colourful protagonists in his story to life in
countless anecdotes.
Sunday Times, 5
December 2004
Singh is one of
the best science journalists writing today. With his
impressive gift for explaining extremely difficult physics, he
takes us on a very human intellectual journey in pursuit of
the origins of the universe. The drama of ideas and
personalities that broke the iron grip of the notion of an
eternal and unchanging universe enables us to come to terms
with the history of time, space and the birth of our world.
Singh insists that cosmology is not just for the eggheads; it
is possible, and indeed essential, for us all to share in the
insights of the great physicists.
Physics World, 5
December 2004
The
unique selling point of this book is not the subject matter.
It is the classic simplicity and clarity of Singh’s writing,
coupled with a diligent programme of research well beyond the
means of almost all his competitors. I have seldom come across
a science book that is easier to read.
Booklist, 1 December
2004 A superb summary of one of
science's most popular topics.
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