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It is difficult to summarise the breadth
of reviewers' responses to Big Bang. Descriptions ranged from
'epic' and 'wonderful' to 'beautiful' and 'entertaining'. Many
reviews emphasised the lucidity of Singh's writing: Nature
said that 'this very well-written book conveys the ideas
underpinning cosmological theory with great clarity' and
The Economist called it 'a model of clarity'.
Singh's ability to tell a complex story
engagingly was also widely praised: 'Singh is a very gifted
storyteller who never misses the chance to make his subject
clearer or more entertaining' wrote Scarlett Thomas in the
Independent on Sunday; the Guardian commented that
'Singh tells his tale well, with chatty anecdotes leavening
the astrophysics' and the Daily Telegraph described the
book as 'an epic tale brilliantly told, packed with courage
and tragedy, heroes and martyrs'.
But, most of all, the book won plaudits
for its tackling of a subject that still strikes fear into
many, otherwise very intelligent, adults: mathematics. 'Even
the most mathematically hobbled of us', said the Sunday
Telegraph, could be enabled to understand 'the history of
man's intellectual engagement with the dark spaces around him'
by reading Big Bang. And, in the Daily Mail, the
maths-phobic were entreated not to worry since 'Simon Singh
spares us most of the maths, and he juggles big ideas with
tact and care'.
For anyone who struggles to understand
science, suggested the Mail on Sunday, Big Bang was a
good place to begin: 'Even if the cosmologists don't know
where the universe is going, at least they have found out
where it has come from. Anybody who wants to understand this
wonderful achievement will not do better than to start with
Singh's book'.
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