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The Sun's Heartbeat: And Other Stories From The Life Of The Star That Powers Our Planet (2011)

by Bob Berman(Favorite Author)
4.05 of 5 Votes: 5
ISBN
0316091014 (ISBN13: 9780316091015)
languge
English
publisher
Little, Brown and Company
review 1: Interesting book. Lots of fascinating information, presented in a very accessible format, but sometimes I felt like it was a little TOO accessible. There were an awful lot of pop-culture references and jokes that made me feel like the author might be sitting next to me, waiting to see if I laughed, so he can reassure himself that he's funny. I would have been happy with a more straightforwardly scientific book. Also, there were parts where the author got excited about some aspect of solar science and raved about it for pages, without ever bothering to explain what he was talking about. These were less informative and ended up being boring to read.On the whole, though, I did learn a lot, and I would recommend the book to others.I will also be paying more attention to solar ... moreeclipses in the future, and may try to heave myself off someplace to see one!
review 2: The Sun's Heartbeat: and Other Stories from the Life of the Star that Powers Our Planet2011 pages290 pagesConsider the sun. For thousands of generations, it has loomed over our kind, radiating heat and light down from above, illuminating our lives and stimulating growth. The ancients worshipped the sun, and not without cause: its description as the giver of life is more literal than poetic. Such is the strength of the sun that it crosses a chasm of 93 million miles in only eight seconds, and its every fluctuation can have dire consequences for those of living on Earth. It is all-important, almost mythical -- and only in the 20th century have we truly begun to understand its reality. An inspiration for divine perfection and stability through the ages, the sun is a writhing, chaotic ball, containing energies that stagger the imagination. In The Sun's Heartbeat, Rob Berman reflects on the importance of the sun -- on how our understanding of it has matured through the ages, and how utterly mesmerizing it still is.We know, of course, that life is impossible without the sun: the food chain rather depends on it. But how many people appreciate that life as we know it wouldn't even exist without solar energy? Not only is the sun the source of all our energy, but its cosmic rays stimulate the mutations that make evolution possible. And even more fundamentally, our atoms were forged through the life and death of stars: their pulsing cores turn basic elements into the heavier ones which constitute the planets and ourselves. Neil deGrasse Tyson, a prominent American astrophysicist, writes that this knowledge makes him want to grab people in the streets and ask -- "Have you heard this?" Berman shares the same excitement about the sun, the same giddy enthusiasm: solar science is clearly kind of awesome to behold. While his zeal for communicating can be a little awkward of times, like an high school teacher using teenage slang, it's expressed perfectly in the chapters on the aurora and eclipses. His description of totality is taken with such care that all the fear, reverence, and wonder of the ages is reborn on the page. This is the peak of a work that abounds in captivating pieces on the history of solar science, starting with Galileo peering at the sun through a telescope and discovering its spots. Berman conveys to the reader an understanding of the sun framed through a history of our questions about it, and the approach succeeds wonderfully. Its slight weakness in organization is more than overwhelmed by the fascinating information and the passionate way it is presented.Related:Storms from the Sun: the Emerging Science of Space Weather, Michael J. Carlowicz less
Reviews (see all)
Rushi
Like pulling back the curtain and seeing how things REALLY work.
Tylerhill12
Absolutely fascinating science writing by a master.
pat
Fascinating and very entertaining!
shona
absolutely fascinating
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