Showing posts with label IYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IYC. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Periodic Tales

So, yeah.  Chemist and IYC. 

Meaning I had to read Hugh Aldersey-Williams's Periodic Tales: A Cultural History of the Elements, From Arsenic to Zinc almost as soon as it appeared on bookshelves.

It was a bit of a follow-up to my reading of Sam Kean's The Disappearing Spoon but less humorous.  This is a very well-researched look into how the discovery of the elements impacted the lives of everyday people:

Hunger for gold as a valuable commodity (Pliny disapproves).
The yellow lamplight of dystopian fiction derives from sodium.
Mercury was praised as a cure-all then turned into a poison.
The development of the Haber-Bosch process by Fritz Haber - the process of nitrogen fixation to produce fertilizer - was a side project in his development of chlorine and other gases which changed the face of warfare in World War I (and led to Wilfrid Owen's poem The Old Lie).

It's best to treat this book as a series of essays linked into "chapters" by similar themes rather than a cohesive book of history.

Drawback - what pictures included are in the book are small and black-and-white.  Bo

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Welcome to Reading Chemistry!

Reading Chemistry is the brainchild resulting from the metaphorical intersection of Conclave, a book, and the UN.  While I was at Alpha Chi Sigma's biennial Conclave, I attended a forum to brainstorm ideas for the International Year of Chemistry (IYC).  I was also reading Sam Kean's The Disappearing Spoon.  When I got home from Conclave, I finished The Disappearing Spoon and then ordered three more chemistry-related books. 

Then it hit me - I could start a blog so people could post about chemistry books of all types.  Scientific, popular science, history, biography, fiction.  All different types.  And I could get it up and running by 2011.

Genius!