Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts

Monday, July 17, 2017

Radioactive: Marie & Pierre Curie - A Tale of Love and Fallout

Lauren Redniss
Lauren Redniss' Radioactive:  Marie & Pierre Curie - A Tale of Love and Fallout is a beautiful book.  It is beautiful because of the amazingly subtle artwork that implies more than it compels, because of the process used to create that artwork, because of the typeface the author created herself based on manuscripts she saw at the New York Public Library, because of the archives and research Redniss delved into and included in the book to make it both very informative and intensely personal.

Redniss' book is different than many other graphic novels.  It's not structured in panels, but in full page illustrations, sometimes accompanied by dense, descriptive text.  It includes many types of artwork, from cyanotype printing (used to achieve a look similar to a radioactive glow), photos, grave rubbings, sketches, and more.  There is a Chernobyl Situational Map and photos of mutant flowers.  It's absolutely stunning.

Radioactive is described as the story of Marie & Pierre Curie, but that's more of a starting point than the arc of the whole story.  Pierre & Marie Curie's partnership was hugely productive, but Marie lived a full life after her husband's untimely death (including earning herself a second Nobel Prize).  She raised seriously amazing scientist children and inspired other scientists and changed the world.

She slept with a bottle of lightly glowing radium next to her bed.  Her clothes and skin glowed.  She had an affair with her husband's former student.  She won two Nobel Prizes.  During World War I, she made France mobile X-labs.  She died a slow, painful death due to radiation exposure, working to the last as she described her "crisis and pus."


Redniss used Marie Curie's life as the centerpoint of her web, but she goes well beyond the lives of the Curies to describe just how much her work has inspired and influenced other people and how much it has impacted the world.  Her work helped develop chemotherapy, treatment still used by cancer treatments today.  Conversely, it led to significant work on the development of the atomic bomb.  Many people in the world became ill or died due to their work with radium; others were inspired by it to study science.

I admit that sometimes this book could be hard for me to follow, and sometimes I had difficulty finding the thread between the Curie storyline and others.  But I really, really enjoyed this book.  The artwork is stunning, almost hypnotic.  Curie's life is fascinating, her work ground-breaking.  And it was so inspiring to read about all these truly amazing women.

Monday, June 26, 2017

The Death and Life of the Great Lakes

Dan Egan
I have lived my whole life by the Great Lakes, specifically Lake Michigan.  I love the vastness of these waters, like interior freshwater oceans.  I grew up visiting the beaches and now walk along the waterfront quite regularly; I live only a mile away from the shore.  So as soon as I heard about Dan Egan's book The Death and Life of the Great Lakes, I knew I would read it.  I don't think I realized just how depressing and stressful the book would be, though.  (That said, it ends on a semi-happy note!)

The Great Lakes were a bastion of glorious fresh water and bountiful fish for many, many years.  They were difficult to navigate, so they were mostly protected and allowed to grow and thrive as they wanted.  And then the St. Lawrence Seaway was built and things have been going downhill since then.

The lakes have been under attack by invasive species constantly since then.  The first attack by these really, really scary looking sea lampreys, which are basically blood-sucking eels that came from the Atlantic Ocean and attacked our poor, unsuspecting lake fish.  I do not recommend googling images of the sea lamprey because it is not something you'll be able to get out of your head any time soon.  It is ghastly and will likely show up in a nightmare.

Luckily, with some great work (that still continues to this day, at a cost), scientists were able to get the sea lamprey population way down by finding a poison that worked on them and only them.  BUT THEN, someone came back to Michigan from out west and was like, "What the Great Lakes need are sporting fish, not boring fish!" and so then he imported salmon to the lakes and then brought a bunch of species for those salmon to eat, and AGAIN the native fish populations dwindled.  (But recreation on the lakes SOARED into a very lucrative industry.)  And people were happy but the lakes were not really a great place.  AND THEN came the mussels, the true villains of our story (and the villains of lake stories all over the country, I think).  And they ate all the phytoplankton and starved out the salmon and the other fish, and there is NO GETTING RID OF THEM.  Really, I heard a Science Friday podcast with Dan Egan and some other scientists recently, and they were basically like, "Hopefully something will come and solve the mussel problem, but it's not likely to be humans."  Because there are just trillions of them.  If you were to drain the lakes, they would be full of these quagga mussels, cleaning the water and eating all the food and being complete menaces.

Also, asian carp has infested the Chicago River and is likely to already be in Lake Michigan and who knows what will happen then.

Suffice it to say, things do not look great for the Great Lakes.  Not only are there the many invasive species, but the lakes are bordered by eight different states, and two countries, and they have all these river tributaries, and people travel from the lakes to other parts of the countries, and the EPA seems to really not care that much about the lakes (to an appalling degree, really), and Chicagoans really want to keep taking from the lakes without giving a lot back, and the fishing industry really wants the salmon back, and other groups really want the trout and perch back, and it is very disheartening to read about.  Very important and fascinating, but fairly disheartening.  People can understand a forest fire or can see glaciers receding, but they don't care nearly as much about things happening underwater.  They don't understand just how different the lakes are now than they were 50 years ago, or 100 years ago.  There has been an incalculable loss to the whole world, and we seem not to notice.

Egan goes into excellent detail not only about the many rounds of invasive species in the lakes, but also about the people who depend on the lakes but also hurt them, the many government agencies that seem pretty ineffective in managing the lakes, and the people who are trying valiantly to help the lakes as much as they can.  I noted many quotes about the lakes that I was going to share in this post, but they are fairly sad and long, and I don't know if that's the best.

Instead, I'll leave you with the uplifting fact that Egan gave me at the end that made me feel a little better.  Native fish species in the lakes may be learning how to eat and digest the evil quagga mussels!  They never did before, and they were starving because the mussels ate all their food.  But now, since the mussels are so plentiful and the fish food is not at all plentiful, the fish are going after the mussels.  This is glorious.  I hope this continues and helps put the lakes in a little bit of a better balance.  Of course, this could all be of no help if more invasive species come in and wreak havoc on the system, or if we continue to pollute the lakes at the same rate that we do now.  But it's a story of resilience and adaptation and rooting for the underdog, and I think that's grand.

If you live by the Great Lakes, or any lake, I highly recommend reading this book!  If you enjoy books about environmental impact, or even if they cast you into despair, but you like to feel well-informed, I recommend this book to you, too.  I plan to do some research to see how I can help the lakes!  If only to go and clean up the beaches sometimes.

And if nothing else, I recommend a listen to the Science Friday podcast I linked to above!  It's excellent.

Thursday, June 8, 2017

Testosterone Rex, by Cordelia Fine

Cordelia Fine
There are a few times in her book Testosterone Rex in which Cordelia Fine self-deprecatingly talks about how, when she introduces herself to people, she is always saddened by the fact that she is not immediately surrounded by fangirls and fanboys who carry copies of her book around and want her to autograph it right then and there.

I admit that I don't carry Fine's Delusions of Gender around with me, but I am a HUGE fan of the book, and I'm pretty sure that if I were ever to meet Fine in person, I would be a total fangirl and absolutely ask to take a photo with her and all sorts of other things.

SO NOW YOU KNOW, CORDELIA - you are just meeting the wrong people.  You have LOADS of fans who love you and your work.

I was pretty excited to learn that Fine had a new book out, this one about how people assume that testosterone is a hormone that creates vast differences between men and women (besides the private bits), and that it can explain a lot of things about human and animal behavior, from risk-taking to spreading the seed to being successful at work.  And, as she does, Fine shoots all of these assumptions down using science.

The book clocks in at less than 200 pages before the footnotes, so it's not long, but there's a LOT packed into its pages.  I don't remember this happening at all while I read Delusions of Gender, but I admit that reading all these details about the sex habits of fish and insects was a little trying for me.  I didn't love every page of this book the way I loved every page of Delusions of Gender, but I do think the pay-off for this book is really just as good!  Just know that I skimmed some parts of it.

Fine makes a lot of great points, and some of them really resonated with me.  For example, she talks about risk-taking and how studies have shown that men are more likely to take risks than women are.  Then she totally breaks apart this whole thing, and it was amazing.  FIRST, she says that when you separate people by ethnicity, it is actually mostly just white men who feel the world is super-safe and therefore are quite willing to take risks.  And, within that subset, it was white men who were "well educated, rich, and politically conservative, as well as more trusting of institutions and authorities, and opposed to a "power to the people" view of the world..."

Who would have thought?  The people with the most privilege are the ones most likely to take "risks," possibly because they are the least likely to lose.

Fine goes on to state that people view risks very differently, and someone may consider one thing quite risky and something else quite safe.  For example, a skydiver could be very conservative with his money, and a Wall Street speculator could drive a Volvo.  It's the individual's perception of the risk that is important, not a general idea of what is risky and what is not.

A salient point to bring those two facts together?  "When asked about the risks to human health, safety, or prosperity arising from high tax rates for business, now it was the women's and minority men's turn to be sanguine."  (Ah, so rich white men were very worried about the risks that would come with taxing business, whereas the people who would more likely benefit from taking that risk were not so worried!)  Basically, people of both genders and all races take risks all the time, it is just that we seem to value some actions as being more risky (skydiving) than others (accepting a job at a company where that you will be the only woman, surrounded by bros).

Cordelia Fine is one of those people with so much glorious righteous anger PLUS a fantastic sense of humor that you kind of want her to fight all your battles for you.  She shares a story about how she went to a school sale and some woman was selling plastic knives, and made a point to say the girl could have a pink knife, but her brother could have red or blue.  She talks about how early kids become aware of gender and what they are "supposed" to do.  (She goes into even more detail on this in Delusions of Gender).  She reminds us that we should never say stupid phrases like, "Boys will be boys," as though we should give them a free pass for being jerks.  She really carries the banner on gender equality, and I love her for it.

Really excellent book!  Go read it!

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Hope Jahren's Lab Girl

One of the things I most missed about blogging while I was in and out this year was discussing books with you guys.  Thus, one of the first things I did when I came back to blogging was to plan a buddy read with one of my favoritest and longest-lasting blogging friends, Ana of things mean a lot.  We chose to read Hope Jahren's memoir Lab Girl because reading about women rocking the science world seemed like a really nice thing to do after the horrors (that continue) of Brexit and the American Presidential election.

Lab Girl is written by a plant biologist who does research on topics that seem to be quite fascinating (at least at the macro level.  At the micro level, it seems like a lot of sorting through dirt).  She writes about how she got into biology, her life as a biologist, and her friendship with someone who is hugely important to her personal and professional life.  Throughout the book, there are vignettes that describe the life of a tree, from seed to seedling to battling disease and other threats to communicating with other plants.  Those vignettes are beautiful.

Unfortunately, Lab Girl wasn't quite what we were expecting, and neither of us loved it as much as we'd hoped.  But there were some really great parts!  Below is our discussion of the book, if you care to read it:

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Joint Musings: The People in the Trees, by Hanya Yanagahira

The People in the Trees, by Hanya Yanagahira
Ana and I read The People in the Trees, by Hanya Yanagahira, together a few months ago, and then spent quite a bit of time writing to each other in ALL CAPS and with lots of exclamation points.  Then Eva joined in and added a whole new level of complexity to our discussion, and the result was that we dissected this novel to a huge extent and the below discussion is full of massive spoilers.  You will probably only want to read it if you have already completed the book, or if you, like me, don't really care about spoilers.

The People in the Trees is based on real events.  The main character is Norton Perina, a brilliant but disturbing doctor who goes to a far-off, isolated island and discovers the secret to incredibly long life.  But long life comes with a price, as so many things do.  The novel explores Perina's life, the impact of colonization, the politics of power, and so much more.  All with the help of two extremely unreliable narrators.  It was one of the best books I've read this year and by far the most disturbing one to date.

Below is our detailed discussion.  We hope you weigh in with your thoughts, too!

The People in the Trees by Hanya Yangihara is written in the form of the fictional memoirs of Dr. Norton Perina, a once renowned scientist who won the Nobel for seemingly uncovering the secret of eternal life, but who has now fallen into disrepute. Perina has been convicted for sexual abuse; in the introduction, written in the voice of Perina's friend and defender Dr. Ronald Kubodera, we're told he's writing his memoirs in prison. The narrative then goes back to young Norton's life, particularly focusing on his expedition to the remote Micronesian island of Ivu'ivu, the discovery that followed, and its far-reaching consequences for the islanders.

In the discussion that follows, we try to make sense of this novel's fascinating horrors. Be warned that some spoilers will be inevitable.

Ana: The People in the Trees has not one but two unreliable narrators, and I found it as troubling as it was accomplished and difficult to put down. I've seen it compared to Lolita on more than one occasion, and now that I've read it I can see why that's apt. Shall we start by talking about the two narrators, Perina and Kubodera, how their biases show, and what they might be hiding from the reader?

Aarti:  Yes!  I’ll start with Perina, since his narration is more apparent to the reader.  It’s always tricky with an unreliable narrator as you don’t know what he’s misconstrued or left out completely.  What was interesting to me about Perina was what he chose (I assume) not to leave out or misconstrue.  For example, he had no concerns about sharing with readers his treatment of his children because he didn’t think there was anything wrong with it.  He also seemed to feel no guilt about his treatment of the original Ivu’Ivuians that he brought to the US, even though their treatment was horrific.  It all ladders up to him coming across as a complete sociopath, so I wonder if there were any key scenes that he did present to us inaccurately (the gang rape ones immediately leap to mind, particularly as Esme reacted so differently to them).

Kubodera is a tougher nut to crack because so much of his work is invisible to us.  He claims that he only made grammatical changes and removed that one section near the end (which was then provided to readers later).  But is that true?  Considering the hero worship, I think it unlikely.  But, again, if Kubodera wanted to show us Perina in a positive light, then he probably would have edited more heavily.  What was his motivation?  Perina never once mentions Kubodera in his whole narrative, and Kubodera admits that he only recently learned that Perina had a brother, and yet Kubodera claims to have known Perina very well.  And, based on the way the book ends, the two clearly had a strong enough relationship to elope together.  So did Kubodera edit himself out of the story?  Or is Perina just so self-absorbed that he would leave out someone so integral to him?  Or is Kubodera just not that important to Perina except as an escape mechanism?

Ana: I do wonder if Kubodera's feelings for Perina are meant to echo Perina's feelings for Tallent, the anthropologist he follows in his first expedition to Ivu’Ivuians.

Aarti:  Oh, that’s a brilliant suggestion!  I never thought of that but it would be a nice parallel.  The aloof, just out of reach mentor.  Though Kubodera was more successful in pinning his unicorn down vs Perina losing Tallent forever.

[I do think Tallent would include Perina in his narrative (not very positively).  We’ll have to talk about Tallent later, too.  So many things to talk about.]

Ana: The fact that Perina never mentions his most ardent defender in his narration suggests that he's far more important to Kubodera than Kubodera is to him, and I wonder if there's a side of unrequited love in there along with the hero worship. At the end of the book I almost felt sorry for Kubodera -- his rape apology is of course horrifying, and in his own way he's as unpleasant a character as Perina. But it does seem to me that Perina is using him to escape, and I can't imagine they have much of a future together.

To go back to your earlier questions, I do wonder if Kubera's lack of heavier editing is as much a reflection of his worldview as Perina's casual admission of his atrocities towards the Ivu’Ivuians or his children (or his recurrent misogyny, which I'm sure we'll discuss in more depth later). I wonder if, because he's a contemporary man, he's more aware than Perina of how those admission would be judged by the world at large. But his decision to include Perina's descriptions of how he sexually assaulted Victor in the end makes it clearer than ever that he still thinks he's in the right. The fact that these two men don't see much wrong with what they admit to shows readers how pervasive their worldview is, and how convinced they are that treating people as things is simply your prerogative if you're a supposedly brilliant man.

Aarti:  Yes, exactly!  This whole belief they justified that science must move forward regardless of any associated costs was just horrifying to me.  The guiding principle of medicine is “do no harm,” and yet all Perina ever did, to everyone he came across, was harm.  For example, note how he completely skims over the work he was doing with pharmaceutical companies to achieve immortality, so that it comes across like he was only ever after the science (even though he clearly had enough money to adopt so many children).  And the way he withheld the information about long life being accompanied by a complete degradation of mental faculties, which I assume is the main reason he kept the Ivu’Ivuians imprisoned.  

And when you think about it, really, what impact did Perina have on the world?  Kubodera describes him as a genius, almost too good for the world at large, but nothing he did had a positive lasting impact.

Ana:  I remember reading in a comment somewhere that it was interesting that Perina was the only one to report the Ivu’Ivuian rape ceremony. We have Esme's reaction to his account of it, and then he takes her to see it another night, but he claims that afterwards she "refused to talk about it" and made no mention of it in any of her books about the island. So all we have is Perina's word that Esme was there at all. For a while I was convinced that what would happen in the end would be that Perina would use the ceremony to "break" Victor, and justify his sexual abuse to himself to his readers that way. But he doesn't even feel the need to justify it -- and to be honest, I can't decide which one of the two would be worse.

Aarti:  I was expecting that, too.  That he would say he was keeping the culture alive for his children in as many ways as he could and ignoring the fact that he was not, in fact, part of that culture, and watching one event with zero context does not make him an expert in it.

I disagree with your comment that Perina didn’t feel the need to justify his behavior, though, at least for that one moment.  To clarify, I agree with you that he didn’t feel at all guilty.  But I feel like the way he described the incident (and I’m going from memory, so I may be off), he talked about how much fear and resistance the boy (what was his name?) put up against him, and then how he covered the boy’s mouth to stifle his screams and explained how much he loved him.  Based on that behavior, he knew he was doing something evil, and that by sharing the story, he had to account for why.  From what I recall, it was almost like a corruption of the white man’s burden - he was trying to tame this boy, and the only way he knew how to do it was with this savage, brutal behavior.  Kind of like Heart of Darkness, instead of sharing the polite, civilized world of western civilization with the boy, he had reverted and become more beastly himself to establish his own superiority.  Does that make any sense?

Ana: Yes, I see what you mean, though his account of it is so horrifying that it takes a sociopath to think it could come across as anything other than what it is. Of course, that's exactly what Yanagihara is doing -- to give readers a glimpse of what the world looks like through the eyes of a sociopath like Perina by making us engage with the story from his perspective, and then read between the lines for what he left out.

For example, all through the novel I wanted to get a better sense of what the other characters might be like without the mediation of Perina's perspective, and without his no doubt countless omissions. To go back to Esme, Perina makes it sound like her view of the Ivu’Ivuians is shaped by "Noble Savage" ideas, which in the end are of course as racist and dehumanising as his own. He strongly implies that this is why she leaves the rapes out of her books and refuses to discuss them -- they don't fit with her preconceptions of a peaceful and idealistic "primitive" society, and so she edits them out of her reality. But of course we don't know whether that really is the case, because all we have is Perina's word. Perina's perception of Esme is distorted by many things, particularly his possessiveness towards Tallent and his blatant misogyny. Here's his description of Esme at one point during their first excursion:

I did not look at her, but around her seemed the sickening scent of menstrual blood, a tinnily feminine smell so oppressive that it was a relief finally to begin the day’s climb and to find it vanishing slowly into the odors of the jungle. And from then on I was unable to look at her without thinking of oozing liquids, as thick and heavy as honey but rank and spoiled, seeping from her every hidden orifice.

That right there tells us everything we need to know about his worldview, and about how much his assessment of a woman anthropologist's work can be trusted.

Aarti:  Yes, I completely agree.  It’s frustrating that we don’t get a sense of the facts at all, just his interpretation of them.  It’s like trying to drive in a heavy fog; you really have no idea of the context.  I wish there were more women in the book that we could use as a gauge, but of course, there are none because Perina pretends they don’t exist.  The only one we get is his mother, and he was quite cruel to her, too.  

His relationships with Esme and Tallent was very difficult to unravel.  Esme completely disappears from the narrative after that first trip to the island (except for that brief meeting back in California), and Tallent is more present in Perina’s dreams than in the flesh.  But then, everyone seems to disappear from Perina’s narrative.  We never hear about the original Ivu’Ivuians except for their horrible mistreatment, we barely know the names of any of the children Perina adopted (and I doubt that the adoption stories happen at all in the way that he describes them), Kubodera is not mentioned at all, and Perina’s brother is just a voice on the phone more than a tangible being.  It’s almost as if the further Perina goes into the science, the more he forgets about the human element and just leaves it behind.  I don’t know if I am explaining this well at all, but at the beginning of the book, many more characters had distinct personalities and physical descriptions; by the end, that seemed to be hardly the case at all.

Ana: Yes, I know exactly what you mean. And I think that's something Yanagihara is probably doing deliberately, because one of the key themes of The People in the Trees is dehumanisation and what happens when it's taken to its final consequences. Perina sees his co-workers, the Ivu'Ivuians and ultimately his children as things he can use and then cast aside; as tools as his disposal to help him achieve his goals rather than as human beings. For example, here's a revealing and disturbing passage about his adoptions that I bookmarked:

Shall I tell you how with each new child I acquired, I would irrationally think, This is the one. This is the one who will make me happy. This is the one who will complete my life. This is the one who will be able to repay me for years of looking.
Shall I tell you how I was always wrong--eighteen, nineteen, twenty times wrong--and how although I was always wrong, I didn't stop, I couldn't stop, I was searching, searching, searching.

Even his choice of verb -- "acquire" -- is immensely revealing. You acquire things, not children. He describes the growth of his family as a shopping compulsion, and that alone tells us everything we need to know about how he sees his children.

We haven't yet said much about how the novel deals with western imperialism, though there's plenty to discuss. There are the consequences of Perina's discovery on the island and what he sees as he goes back year after year; there's Victor's rejection of his westernized name; there's the horrible fate of the Ivu'Ivuians when they're forcibly removed from their home. Do you have any thoughts you want to share?

Aarti:  Oh, I have so many thoughts, but I probably can’t share them all!  Probably anyone who reads my blog or knows me will know that I have pretty strong opinions on imperialism and its effects on cultures and lifestyles, both good and bad (but mostly bad).  I don’t know that I can say much that is new except that Yanagahira makes her views on imperialism pretty obvious in this book.  Not only is there the destruction of an entire culture and way of life, there’s the extinction of a beautiful and peaceful animal, all the vices and problems that come when one person becomes very, very rich at the expense of other people, and all the rest of the horrible baggage that comes along with imperialism.

But I think what was most telling for me (and is particularly relevant now, especially given recent events in the US) was Perina’s COMPLETE lack of accountability.  He refused to accept that he had anything to do with the the stampede on Ivu’Ivu, even though he was a pretty direct cause, and he kept setting himself up as some sort of savior rather than a culprit.  It’s as though he was telling a very different story than the one I was reading, and I think that explains colonialism in a nutshell.

What do you think of Yanagahira’s strategy in doing this?  She seems to have set up Perina as the human embodiment of colonialism - a man who thought only of the benefits to himself and not of the consequences to other people.  Do you see anywhere that she gave Perina (and perhaps western Imperialism) the upper hand or the benefit of the doubt?  Or was everything just completely corrupted?

Ana: I really couldn't see anything about it that wasn't awful: what we see in what happens Ivu'Ivu is a perfect example of unshackled greed at work, be it for money (in the case of the big corporations who come in search of the turtles) or, in Perina's  case, greed for glory and recognition.

Since we started this discussion, Eva shared an interview with us that possibly casts Yamagihara's authorial intent in a different light:

Gajdusek’s story fascinated me. Here was an indisputably brilliant mind who also did terrible things. It’s so easy to affix a one-word description to someone, and it’s so easy for that description to change: if we call someone a genius, and then they become a monster, are they still a genius? How do we assess someone’s greatness: is it what they contribute to society, and is that contribution negated if they also inflict horrible pain on another? Or—as I have often wondered—is it not so binary?

What do you make of her statement, particularly in relation to how Perina is portrayed in the novel?

Aarti: Ohmigoodness, so much inner turmoil after seeing that statement.  I agree with Yanagahira that nothing is binary, but I also don’t think Perina had any redeeming features, so for him, I think monster is a pretty accurate term.  He did nothing to improve anyone’s lives, and did much to ruin many people’s lives.  As Eva said in our offline discussion:

“What’s weird to me is that her fictional scientist *doesn’t* help millions of people. Like, if his research had provided a cure to Alzheimer’s or dementia or cancer or something, that would provide a bit more of an argument the other way. But my impression from reading is that the island was wasted, and the people destroyed, and nothing came of it.”

Which, YES, exactly.  Personally, I see nothing redemptive there to tip him into the “genius” category.

Ana: Yes, it's a challenging one to make sense of. I don't want to dismiss the ambiguity Yamagihara hints at entirely, because I know it's possible to have a meaningful relationship with the work of someone whose actions you absolutely don't condone. My experience of this is in the arts more than in the sciences, but it's fundamentally the same thing: there are books that were important to me before I found out awful things about their authors. My relationship with their work continues to exist, even if I choose not to support them in the future (and that's always going to be a very personal decision -- different people draw the line differently). It's not so much that I separate the two in my head, but the two sets of feelings can exist side by side.

However, like you I had trouble seeing it here, for a few different reasons. First because I was also at a loss when it came to identifying a positive side to Perina's work; secondly and even more importantly, because his work is impossible to separate from the colonial impulse that does so much damage to Ivu’Ivu. It's not that the latter was an unintended consequence of his intellectual curiosity and quest for knowledge -- it's that the two are one and the same.

So to me this was one of those cases where I reminded myself that books belong to their readers. I don't know what Hanya Yanagihara intended when she wrote The People in the Trees, but to me it reads like a chilling denouncement of a worldview that costs people their lives, and of all the internal justifications that accompany. That's what I found so powerful, and that's what's going to stay with me.

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Review-itas: Technology is amazing edition

Steven Johnson
Steven Johnson's How We Got to Now:  Six Innovations that Made the Modern World is exactly the sort of macro-focused science idea book that I love.  Johnson looks at world history not from the human perspective but from the innovation perspective and how innovation and technology have propelled the world forward through history.  He focuses on six big ideas:  cold, sound, light, time, glass, and clean.

I loved everything about this book, from the history lessons we learn about things like shipping ice halfway across the world to the lovely anecdotes about brilliant (and sometimes forgotten) people who have changed our world to the unexpected impacts that innovations have had on our world today.  For example, after Gutenberg invented the printing press and books were made widely available, people realized that they were far-sighted or near-sighted and corrective lenses were born.  Another innovation in glass, the mirror, allowed people to see themselves for the first time, and so artists started painting self-portraits (the original selfie) and authors started writing fiction, often about internal struggles and journeys, as a result of so much self-examination.

My favorite of the big ideas was the one on glass, but all of them are fascinating.  Such a fun and inspiring book that makes you think much more about the world around you and the everyday marvels and miracles we experience without even thinking about them.

Michio Kaku
I really enjoyed Michio Kaku's Physics of the Impossible when I read it last year, so I was excited to get my hands on his new book, The Future of the Mind:  The Scientific Quest to Understand, Enhance, and Empower the Mind.  It seems impossible, but actually, this new book felt way more out there and abstract to me than Physics of the Impossible.  I am not sure why wormholes and invisibility suits feel more tangible to me than formless minds and specific-memory-erasing medication, but it's true!  There was a lot in this book that was way over my head, and a lot that stretched the limits of belief.  If nothing else, The Future of the Mind makes you understand and value just how complex and amazing the brain is, and just how much is subconscious and therefore very difficult to program into a computer.  It's absolutely fascinating.

This book also tackles many more of the ethical dilemmas and minefields that are inherent to mind manipulation.  For example, if you could erase a painful memory to decrease your pain, would you?  Many people say no, but no one considers it unethical to give a person morphine against physical pain.  We treat physical and mental pain differently, and perhaps that is unfair to people who suffer greatly from painful memories.  Similar ethical issues arise as robot technology becomes more complex.  Should robots have feelings?  Should they be able to feel pain?  At what point does the line between human and robot begin to blur?

For lack of a better word, this book is just really COOL.  There are so many scenarios and hypotheses raised here that have never even occurred to me.  For example, what if space travel were possible not with our bodies but only with our minds?  What if humans and robots merged into one type of being at some point in the future?  What if we find ways to combat and then eradicate brain disease?  Or to pump up the features of the brain to become super-humans?  Are these things even possible?  And if so, what is the time line for them?  So much to think about!  Even though some of the information presented was difficult for me to follow (especially in audiobook), I found this book to be so inspiring.  So much work is being done to understand how our minds work, and we will know so much more over the next several years and decades.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Review-itas: Science will blow your mind edition

The World without us by Alan Weisman
The World Without Us, by Alan Weisman, has a premise that enthralled me as soon as I read about it.  What would happen to the world if humans just disappeared?

I read this book via audiobook and a few things really stood out to me, though they are pretty unrelated to each other:

  • Cats apparently kill almost half a billion birds a year, I think in the United States alone.  Good heavens!  They are natural-born killers of lovely sing-songy birds.  There's a reason our mornings are not quite so chirpy as they used to be, and house cats are a big reason why.  I hope you keep yours inside!
  • The nuclear weapons that we're just holding onto (and not very securely) and the chemical waste that they are likely to create are very, very scary.
  • The amount of plastic we have created and poorly disposed of over the past 50 years is potentially even scarier than the nuclear waste problem.
Weisman's book is not a very positive one.  Honestly, it seems like even if humans were to disappear tomorrow, there's a lot of stuff we've done that will take eons to fix.  But in other ways, the book made me feel a little bit better.  The world existed before we arrived, and the world will continue to exist and evolve after we're gone.  While much of the information shared here was a little depressing, there was a lot of good information about the history of the world, just how difficult it is to keep nature (especially water!) at bay, and a lot of interesting speculation on what our lasting impact will be.  Definitely glad I read this one.

Physics of the Impossible by Michio Kaku
After reading The World Without Us, I felt like I was really on a science cusp.  And really, if we're well on our way to messing up our own planet, I think it's important we have some sort of contingency plan or back-up planet (preferably uninhabited so that we do not do the whole colonizing thing again).  So reading Michio Kaku's Physics of the Impossible seemed like the right next move.  

This book also has a pretty sweet premise.  Kaku looks at the science fiction literature and popular culture around him, and other "wouldn't it be SO awesome if...?" scenarios and discusses them as a physicist.  What, based on the known laws of the universe, is actually feasible?  What is not?  And why?  Topics covered include invisibility cloaks (we are actually really close on this one), time travel, teleportation, parallel universes, and wormholes.

I mean, seriously, how baller is it to be able to discuss the limitations of teleportation and telekinesis with people as a professional and intellectual exercise?!

I read this book as an audiobok, and admittedly, a lot of it went over my head.  I think if I could read some sentences again and give myself time to understand the implications, especially those about cubic roots and the theory of relativity and other formulae, then I would probably be able to follow along better.  But my main takeaway from this book is that so many more things are possible than I'd ever dreamed.  We have no conception of what awaits us in the universe (well, maybe astrophysicists do.  I certainly do not).  And it's a heady feeling to imagine what life will be in 1,000 years.  Kaku points out that humans have really only been around for 10,000 years or so.  Imagine if there are intelligent species out there that have been around for 100,000 years or longer; think about how much more advanced they must be than us.  The thought is both heady and terrifying.  

Another fact that I always understood vaguely before but now feel has been imprinted in my mind is just how far things are in outer space.  I mean, traveling to another planet is hard enough, let alone another solar system.  And to somewhere in another galaxy - that just takes FOREVER.  (Unless, of course, we can jump into hyperspace or find a wormhole somewhere that will just quickly dump us out, saving us time and hassle.)  There is SO MUCH of the universe out there that we cannot even dream of contacting, and they probably feel the same way out there as we do.  But, if we could contact them, then we could communicate with them through math or physics because (and this is something else I generally understood before but did not quite get the implications of until now) those would be the same everywhere!  In case you too were vague on what this means, it means - aliens could have microwaves, too!  And nuclear bombs!  And any matter of other devices, because the science behind those inventions is the SAME ALL OVER THE UNIVERSE.  (Well, I think - that is, if I understood Kaku correctly.)  Isn't that so fascinating?  I think so.

And on that note (TV dinners of the universe unite!), I shall end this :-)

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Hump de (baby) bump

Expecting Better by Emily Oster
Six of my close friends are pregnant at this very moment, and I know at least four other women having children this year.  Add in the friends that already have children, and let me tell you - I hear a lot about pregnancy and babies.

To be clear, I am not pregnant.

However, pregnancy and childbirth are important milestones in many women's lives.  And honestly, when my friends talk to me about this stuff, I would like to have something to contribute to the conversation.  And if that contribution is, "Actually, studies have shown that you can eat sushi and drink wine, so let's go somewhere fun for dinner tonight.  SCIENCE!" then that is all the better for me.

Emily Oster's book Expecting Better is about all of the rules and advice and myths that surround pregnancy, and whether they are justified or not.  Oster is an economist, and when her doctor told her things like, "Don't drink coffee," she asked why.  And then she went and researched the studies that were cited as evidence so that she could make her decision about coffee for herself.  Oster emphasizes several times that she isn't trying to prove a rule right or wrong; she's trying to provide information to people so that they can make decisions for themselves instead of feeling scared or overwhelmed or guilty all the time.  As she says, information is power, and you can decide what to do with the information.

I thought the early chapters of this book were more applicable to me as a woman than the later chapters.  The later chapters were definitely focused on the birth stages, how to initiate labor, how to make a birth plan, deciding on whether to use an epidural or not, etc.  Definitely not anything that I need to know right now, though I found the information interesting and have already spouted off some facts about epidurals to a couple of friends.

The earlier chapters talk about getting pregnant, the early stages of pregnancy, and women's bodies.  There was a lot of really good information about genetic testing and a ton of information on drinking coffee and alcohol, eating sushi, managing your weight (LOTS on weight) and taking medication.

I think Oster's approach to pregnancy is one that more people should adopt.  I like how she thought critically about everything and didn't just take anything at face value.  She cited every study she looked at and said very clearly why she believed it to be valid or flawed.  She then talked readers through how she viewed the information and came to her decision, and would often give a little note about what her other pregnant friends decided after seeing the same information (often, they all made different choices, though they had the same information).  I can't imagine Oster was her gynecologist's favorite patient (and it did seem in the book as though Oster had a very tense relationship with her doctor), but I do think Oster is a great advocate for other women.

She points out that the studies are all publicly available, which is great, though I wonder if non-economists or scientists would be able to sift through which are good and which are bad.  Oster talks about sample size (which makes sense) and the null hypothesis (which I understand, but probably would not think about when reading a pregnancy study), and many other important facts that I probably would not catch because I have never done a research project before.  So, for all of us who are not PhD's, I'm glad this book exists and that Oster took the time to write it instead of just hoarding all of this important information to herself.

I read this as an audiobook, and I enjoyed the narration, though the audiobook probably could have been edited a bit.  There were a few lists of medications and symptoms and illnesses and how to treat them that I do not think were necessary in the audiobook.  Therefore, if you're pregnant and interested in this book, I recommend the physical copy - it seems to have a pretty handy appendix, and I think it would be a good reference guide for a lot of questions you might have as you go through your pregnancy.

For those who are not pregnant - the audiobook is great, and I recommend it.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

The perils of studying dragons while wearing a skirt

A Natural History of Dragons
A Natural History of Dragons:  A Memoir by Lady Trent is a fictionalized account of a Victorian(-esque) woman's efforts to become a scientist of note.  The book's author is Marie Brennan.

The book is the first in a series that relates Lady Trent's life.  This book tackles the early part of her life, from her childhood spent catching sparklers and dissecting birds to her coming out and marriage, and then onto her first scientific trip to the far reaches of the world (basically an alternate Russia).  Through it, her love of dragons runs deep, though I don't quite know why she loves dragons so much.  I think because they are large and can fly.  In this world, though, dragons are just another animal - they cannot speak (at least, not to humans).  If you ever watched Discover Channel's Dragons:  A Fantasy Made Real (and if you didn't, why not?!), this is more in that tone.

This is one of those books I liked on so many levels, except perhaps the deep emotional one (which is an important level).  I love the premise, I love the setting, I love the feminism, I enjoy the narrative voice, and gosh, I like dragons.  But while I think Lady Trent is someone that I would like to know and admire greatly, she probably isn't someone that I would make an effort to see regularly.  There was just a bit of distance between us.  She is not cold, I just that I did not feel a great deal of warmth for her.  And none of the other characters were given much meat, either.  Everyone just felt quite shallow to me, and I wanted a chance to get to know them better.

That said, on an intellectual level, this book was very engaging!  There is a mystery at the center of this book - why have dragons started to attack humans in a particular region when they never did before?  And what helps to solve this mystery?  SCIENCE.  And Lady Trent is one of the people involved in figuring it out!  I can only imagine how wonderful that must have felt for her, and that came through loud and clear - when you help advance knowledge about your lifelong passion, the feelings, they are good.

I also appreciated Lady Trent's narrative voice.  She writes these memoirs when she is much older and wiser.  It's nice to see that somewhere along the way, she grew confident in her own scientific abilities and stopped apologizing for being a woman.  You can see glimpses of her just OWNING IT in the future, and I am excited to read the books about how she got there.  Even today, it's difficult to be a woman in science, and I think this would be a fantastic book for younger readers to see what a worthwhile struggle it can be.

On a side note, I am LOVING all these books about women science geniuses.  Flavia is still my absolute favorite, but I appreciate Lady Trent, too!  Anyone have any other recommendations?

Monday, February 24, 2014

The often disturbing, sometimes inspiring ways in which humans interact with animals

Finally!  I first heard about Jon Mooallem's Wild Ones:  A Sometimes Dismaying, Weirdly Reassuring Story About Looking at People Looking at Animals in America on the 99% Invisible podcast in October.  (If you have still not listened to this, you are doing yourself a grave disservice.)  I promptly put it on my library wish list.  3.5 months later, it was finally in my hands.  And now I've finished it, and it's left me with a lot to think about.

Jon Mooallem writes about raising his daughter under the cloud of knowing that the world she sees as an adult will be drastically different - half of all species on earth now could be extinct by the end of this century.  He sets out to learn about conservation in America by tracking three endangered species - the polar bear, the poster child victim of climate change; the Lange's metalmark butterfly, a tiny, delicate beauty; and the whooping crane, a species that has been on the receiving end of a truly amazing amount of human interest.

What Mooallem learns is absolutely fascinating, even if it ultimately makes you believe that wildlife conservation seems completely doomed to failure.  After all, is there a purpose to saving the polar bear if we are committed to ruining its natural habitat?  And what value does one small species of butterfly add to the world when there are so many other species that have a greater impact on their environment?  While the book is ostensibly about these animals, it is also about the many, many people who have dedicated their lives to what seems to be a losing battle of trying to save the world, one animal at a time, and just how much passion and effort and pain and heartache people put into the effort.  And that's the reassuring part alluded to in the title, I think - much as we humans are destroying the world around us and changing it irrevocably from what it originally was - we also make Hail Mary, last ditch, desperate efforts to save those species we consider "worthy," often at the expense of other animals and at great personal cost.

I've never thought of it that way before, really.  I have always looked at the flip side - how we all just go down this path of least resistance, doing what we always do and punting to the next generation to deal with things when they get to a true crisis point.  But we also spend so much energy and manpower and money and time and research trying to do the opposite, too.  For example, there are people who dedicate years of their lives to dressing up in white sheets with crane puppets on their hands, in complete silence, trying to help captive whooping cranes learn how to survive.  Then these people (still dressed in the white sheets) drive ultralight planes at a very slow, frustrating pace, down a migration pattern that they want the cranes to follow, in the hopes that these cranes will then learn to migrate south on their own.  And they land in people's farms and are hosted by these people who kindly give up part of their land every year to these cranes, even though the hosts are never allowed to see the cranes, in hopes of keeping human contact at a minimum.  It's true.  Watch here.

Can you even wrap your head around the absolute generosity that is present every day in an endeavor like this?  And whooping cranes are just one example.  There was also a fantastic story about Humphrey the Humpback, a whale that got off-track and swam upriver from the ocean, and then all of the human effort that people exerted to get it back into the ocean.



For all of our capacity for harm on a massive scale, human beings also have a true capacity for greatness on an individual level.  The question remains, however, whether those individual efforts will ever be enough to keep species alive and viable in the future, or if they will forever more rely on humans for their survival.

I learned so many things from this book.  For example, the Lange's metalmark butterfly is an endangered species, but there is a butterfly that looks almost exactly like it living elsewhere in the country and doing fairly well.  That other butterfly is not a very close genetic relation to the Lange's.  The Lange's closest genetic relative looks nothing like it, actually, though genetically, they are almost twins. And the other one?  Also not endangered.  So... what makes the Lange's so special that it gets status?  Not its looks, because there's another butterfly that looks just like it that is not endangered.  And not its genes, as it has a pretty close relative that is not endangered.  Hmm...

This was such a wonderful, beautifully written book about peoples' relationships with animals over time, and how difficult the issues are that surround conservation today.  Is it worth saving a species if the habitat they live in is doomed?  Should we allow animals to rely on humans for survival to help  save a species or should we be hands off?  How "wild" should we expect animals to be when control so many aspects of their lives?  And should we be trying to save a few, "important" species, or should we concentrate on ensuring that the pockets of the world all of us live in are as biologically diverse as possible?  These are all difficult questions to answer.  Mooallem doesn't attempt to answer any of them, but tells us so many stories to illustrate how we have struggled with this for so long, and continue to struggle with it.  Wild Ones is a wonderful homage to conservation struggles in America, full of personal stories and historical anecdotes and shot through with so much wistfulness it can be hard not to cry.  Highly recommended.


Thursday, December 19, 2013

Joint Musings: Parasite Rex

Parasite Rex by Carl Zimmer
Carl Zimmer's Parasite Rex has been on my TBR list for a while.  It first came to my attention when Ana reviewed it some years ago.  And now that  I am a podcast junkie, I've heard Zimmer on lots of science-y podcasts, and he is always very engaging and so passionate about the topics he discusses.

But reading about parasites can be a daunting task, and I never pulled the book off my shelf.  Until just recently, when Lu and I decided to read it together.  I'm so glad we did because this is the sort of book that really wows you with its facts and history, and you need someone with whom to share your "OMG" moments.

Lu and I had a really fun discussion about the book.  You can find the first half of our chat over at her blog.  And the second half is right here!  Don't be scared off by the cover.  The book has some slow parts, but overall, it is fascinating!

[continued from Lu's blog]

Leslie: It seems a little scary, to be honest! I think something has to be done, but a lot of these ecological problems are because of new species being introduced into the environment and wreaking havoc. So to introduce another organism to fight it seems like it could also have dire consequences on the ecosystem.  It’s very exciting when it works and it’s cutting edge science that’s truly amazing, but I did come away from the book being worried about what would happen if it went wrong.


I was also fascinated by the way parasites can manipulate other creatures. Right after I finished Parasite Rex, I read a news article about an isopod that takes over as a fish’s tongue. It first eats the tongue and then performs the function of the tongue until it can raise its young. Then, when the young are released, the parasite and the host fish both die. I mean, what?! How is this possible?


Aarti:  I read that article, too!  I don’t know how they can do it, either.  It is SO SCARY.  I obviously am now terrified that who knows WHAT is consuming my innards at any and all moments now.  The book has really affected me!  I’ll just be reading or listening to the radio or something and somehow, something will relate back to parasites!  For example, I am reading A Tale for the Time Being, by Ruth Ozeki, and in it, one of the characters describes being bullied at school as though she is the slow water buffalo in a pack and the hyenas are stalking her out as their prey.  And I was like, “Ooh, maybe that animal has a parasite that ultimately wants to end up in a hyena, not a water buffalo!”


Leslie: Even though the science occasionally went over my head, I really think that this is the kind of nonfiction that gets you excited for a topic you never really knew you had an interest in. I had a couple of people remark when I was reading it that it seemed too scary, like all they’d be able to think about were parasites when they were done reading. I mostly just found it fascinating, though, and I think it’s written in such a way that it’s accessible for everyone, without being too terrifying!

Aarti:  I agree.  And while I don’t think the book is so scary that it will make you think about parasites all the time, it will probably be one of those books that will be recalled to mind at random times because it touched on so many different and interesting aspects of how life evolves on this planet!

Thursday, September 19, 2013

What do tulips have in common with marijuana?

The Botany of Desire
Finally, I borrowed an audiobook version of a book I already had on my TBR pile!  Hooray for me!  That lucky book was The Botany of Desire, by Michael Pollan, and I'm really quite glad that I borrowed it.  This is one of those books that I got soon after discovering farmers' markets and reading Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, and while I always knew I wanted to read it eventually, I never wanted to read it RIGHT NOW.  But when you go through an audiobook every week or so, the pickings can get slim fairly quickly.  It's easy to see everything on your quite extensive wish list and say "Meh" to it all.  When that happens, I tend to force myself into reading a book I already own because, well, it's as good a way to choose a book as any!

So I can't say The Botany of Desire was chosen by me for any wonderfully momentous occasion.  But I really enjoyed the whole book, and I am glad now that I've not pruned it from my shelves at all in the last 3.5 years while it sat unread.

The Botany of Desire is a book about evolution and artificial selection.  But instead of assuming that it's humans that do the selecting and the domesticating, Pollan thinks about it from the plant's POV.  All living things have a natural desire to pro-create; therefore, plants must have just as much a stake in their being domesticated as humans do, as it makes it a lot easier for them to thrive if someone is dedicated to taking care of them.  It's an excellent premise (and, no doubt, is part of the reason I picked this book up 3.5 years ago), and Pollan's storytelling is top-notch.  There is just something so great about books that combine science and history and social relevance, particularly when they are written well, and Michael Pollan does it REALLY well.  So does Charles C. Mann.  I assume Carl Zimmer is much the same.