Field of Science

Books read in 2024

I read 57 books this year, satisfying my annual goal of reading at least 50. Some are re-reads (starred) —I was on an Oliver Sacks binge last month. As usual, the list is skewed toward non-fiction (verity) with some excellent fiction: Hernan Diaz's "Trust," an endlessly inventive novel, was a keeper. And as usual, science and history dominate the list.

My top five favorites were “The Best Minds” (a riveting real-life tale of schizophrenia and murder), “Fire Weather” (a brilliantly written investigation of the confluence of oil and fire country in the the vast wilderness of Canada), Oliver Sacks’s “Letters”, “More than Curious” (a revealing account of physics personalities and ideas from one on the frontier) and “Material World” (an endlessly fascinating account of the origins, properties, and geopolitical implications of the critical materials that fuel our civilization).
Happy reading in 2025!

  1. Weapons of the Lewis and Clark Expedition - Jim Garry

  2. The Indispensables - Patrick O’Donnell

  3. From Falling Bombs to Radio Waves - Emilie Serge

  4. New Cold Wars - David Sanger

  5. The Fifties - David Halberstam

  6. For Blood and Money - Nathan Vardi

  7. Madame Curie - Eve Curie

  8. Physics in the Twentieth Century - Victor Weisskopf

  9. I’ve Been Thinking - Daniel Dennett

  10. Letters - Oliver Sacks

  11. Uncle Tungsten - Oliver Sacks*

  12. On the Move - Oliver Sacks*

  13. Awakenings - Oliver Sacks*

  14. A Leg to Stand On - Oliver Sacks

  15. Deadly Feasts - Richard Rhodes

  16. The Man With a Shattered World - A. R. Luria

  17. The Golden Road - William Dalrymple

  18. Campaigning with Grant - Horace Porter

  19. Poor Charlie’s Almanack - Charlie Munger*

  20. Origin Story: The Trials of Charles Darwin - Howard Markel

  21. Klan War: Ulysses S. Grant and the Battle to Save Reconstruction - Fergus Bordewich

  22. No Ordinary Time - Doris Kearsn Goodwin

  23. Playground - Richard Powers

  24. Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine - Angela Creager

  25. Areopagitica - John Milton

  26. The Uranium Club - Miriam Hiebert

  27. America’s Cold Warrior - James Wilson

  28. Project Hail Mary - Andy Weir

  29. Quanta and Fields - Sean Carroll

  30. The Peacemaker - William Inboden

  31. Reagan - Max Boot

  32. Why We Die - Venki Ramakrishnan

  33. Genius Talk - Denis Brian

  34. Trust - Hernan Diaz

  35. Waves in an Impossible Sea - Matt Strassler

  36. Material World - Ed Conway

  37. More than Curious - William Press

  38. American Spring - Walter Borneman

  39. Valley Forge - Bob Drury, Tom Clavin

  40. American Colonies - Alan Taylor

  41. Breaking the Spell - Daniel Dennett

  42. Strategies of Containment - John Lewis Gaddis

  43. Hinge Points - Siegfried Hecker

  44. Washington: The Indispensable Man - James Flexner

  45. The Best Minds - Jonathan Rosen

  46. Fire Weather - John Vaillant

  47. Inside the O’Briens - Lisa Genova

  48. The Revolutionary - Stacy Schiff

  49. Blind Spots - Marty Makary

  50. The Quiet Damage - Jesselyn Cook

  51. Foundation for the Future: The ABM Treaty and National Security - Arms Control Association

  52. The Japanese Empire: Grand Strategy from the Meiji Restoration to the Pacific War - S. C. M. Paine

  53. The Gravity of Math - Shing-Tung Yau and Steve Nadis

  54. In Retrospect: The Tragedy and Lessons of Vietnam - Robert McNamara*

  55. The Fog of War - Robert McNamara and Erroll Morris

  56. Because Our Fathers Lied - Craig McNamara

  57. Making Weapons, Talking Peace - Herbert York


In addition, there were textbooks that I browsed and worked through to various degrees; many of them are old favorites and are part of my continued education. The books included Alberts et al.'s "Molecular Biology of the Cell", Patrick's "Introduction to Medicinal Chemistry", Taylor and Wheeler's "Exploring Black Holes: Introduction to General Relativity", Feynman's "Lectures" (Volume 2), Glasstone's "Nuclear Reactor Engineering" and Penrose's "Road to Reality".