The Making of the Atomic Bomb is a contemporary history book written by the American journalist and historian Richard Rhodes, first published by Simon & Schuster in 1987. It won the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction, the National Book Award for Nonfiction,[2] and a National Book Critics Circle Award. The narrative covers people and events from early 20th century discoveries leading to the science of nuclear fission, through the Manhattan Project and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Praised both by historians and former Los Alamos weapon scientists, the book is considered a general authority on early nuclear weapons history, as well as the development of modern physics in general, during the first half of the 20th century. Nobel Laureate I. I. Rabi, one of the prime participants in the dawn of the atomic age, called it “an epic worthy of Milton. No where else have I seen the whole story put down with such elegance and gusto and in such revealing detail and simple language which carries the reader through wonderful and profound scientific discoveries and their application.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Making_of_the_Atomic_Bomb
Books wishlist
The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos: Brian Greene
The Character of Physical Law – Richard Feynman, Frank Wilczek
Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space: Carl Sagan
Origins: Fourteen Billion Years of Cosmic Evolution: Neil deGrasse Tyson, Donald Goldsmith
Chasing Venus: The Race to Measure the Heavens: Andrea Wulf
Ray Monk – Robert Oppenheimer: A Life Inside the Center
Solaris (novel)
Solaris is a 1961 philosophical science fiction novel by Polish writer Stanisław Lem. The book centers upon the themes of the nature of human memory, experience and the ultimate inadequacy of communication between human and non-human species.
In probing and examining the oceanic surface of the planet Solaris from a hovering research station the human scientists are, in turn, being apparently studied by the sentient planet itself, which probes for and examines the thoughts of the human beings who are analyzing it. Solaris has the ability to cast their secret, guilty concerns into a material form, for each scientist to personally confront. All efforts of human probing into the secrets of Solaris proved to be futile. As Lem wrote himself, “The peculiarity of those phenomena seems to suggest that we observe a kind of rational activity, but the meaning of this seemingly rational activity of the Solarian Ocean is beyond the reach of human beings”.
First published in Warsaw in 1961, the 1970 Polish-to-French-to-English translation of Solaris is the best-known of Lem’s English-translated works.
Carlo Rovelli -Seven Brief Lessons on Physics
Isaac Asimov – The End of Eternity
Source: The End of Eternity – Wikipedia