The Disappearing Spoon by Sam Kean
“The Disappearing Spoon” is one mystery solved by the
periodic table, in this entertaining grab-bag of historical oddities from
chemistry.
The Disappearing Spoon (Young
Readers Edition) by Sam Kean. Little,
Brown, 2018, 212 pages plus appendix.
Reading Level:
Teen, 12-15
Recommended for:
ages 10 and up
Even if you flunked chemistry (the way I almost did), this fun tour of the periodic table will be endlessly fascinating. Written to entertain as much as edify, the chatty style and meandering narrative suits its description from the subtitle: and Other True Tales of Rivalry, Adventure, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements. The author further summarizes his scope:
[I]t’s one of the few things we know of that’s literally universal—something that even alien life forms would understand. But the periodic table of the elements is a very human thing as well, a treasure trove of all our passions and obsessions. And I’m constantly amazed at all we’ve managed to pack in there.
As you might gather, the
approach is not systematic—I could have used a little more of a refresher on
basic atomic structure and chemical bonding, rather than picking up those
concepts on the fly, but the historical tidbits maintain interest even when
comprehension flags. The author finds in
that orderly chart of elements the very stuff of disorderly life: “We eat and
breathe the periodic table; people bet and lose huge sums on it; philosophers
use it to probe the meaning of science; it poisons people, it spawns wars.” And it makes for some entertaining and
informative reading—who would have thought?
The appendix includes
glossary, index, and a two-page spread of the periodic table for quick
reference.
Cautions:
Worldview (evolutionary assumptions)
Overall Rating: 4 (out of 5)
Worldview/moral value: 3.5 Artistic value: 4.25
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