logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code

The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements - Community Reviews back

by Sam Kean
sort by language
Url Phantomhive
Url Phantomhive rated it 5 years ago
I finally finished this one. It was a read for the Flat Book Society and I believe I was the last one still reading The Disappearing Spoon. It was not an easy read, especially at times. The first couple of chapters were all over the place and I know a lot of people DNFed at this point. I continued a...
Locus Amoenus: All By My Shelf
Locus Amoenus: All By My Shelf rated it 5 years ago
I really tried, you guys. I love popular science books, because although it wasn't my best subject at school, I found a lot of the history behind the discipline really interesting. So I read as many of these books as I can. However, this one alternately confused me and bored me to tears. I don't...
BrokenTune
BrokenTune rated it 5 years ago
DNF @ page 81. Dear fellow Flatbookers, I am so sorry. I really thought I had turned a corner. I really thought I had found a book that could keep my interest and that would not lead me to yet another DNF of a pop science book. But here's the thing, after making it through Part 1 of Kean's ...
Tannat
Tannat rated it 5 years ago
Finished the first chapter, and I take what I said back. Sam Kean isn't condescending; he's trying to imitate his earlier terrible teachers and mystify us. I thought I understood the periodic table, but Kean's explanations were all over the place and diverged into so many tangents about Plato and ...
TeaStitchRead
TeaStitchRead rated it 5 years ago
Date Published: August 18, 2010 Format: Audiobook (Tantor Audio) Source: RB Digital/RAF Lakenheath Library Date Read: January 3-5, 2019 BL's Flat Book Society book club pick for January 2019 Blurb: Why did Gandhi hate iodine (I, 53)? Why did the Japanese kill Godzilla with missiles made of cadmiu...
Steeped in Science, Submersed in Story
Storytelling at its best. The author steps through the periodic table and tells the stories he knows about the elements' uses, discoveries, etc. The stories are all short, and therefore, of course, a little over-simplified. I don't think some of them would pass a rigorous scholarly historical int...
SusannaG - Confessions of a Crazy Cat Lady
This book is a fun romp through chemistry's periodic table, and an enjoyable read. Sam Kean has a real knack for picking stories about the elements (and the creation of the table itself) that are not only informative, but make entertaining reading. Kean focuses on the personalities of the scienti...
karenf
karenf rated it 11 years ago
Not currently reviewing due to change in Goodreads review policy. May update later.
Sesana
Sesana rated it 11 years ago
A fun read, for a certain value of fun. This is a book for science geeks, or those curious about science. If you're a full-fledged science geek, this could be a relatively light side read. If you're more of a layman, it's an opportunity to read some science that shouldn't be too far over your head, ...
nouveau
nouveau rated it 11 years ago
very impressive, very well-edited prose dealing with the various interesting elements of the periodic table. Kean in one or two places over-explains, he has a noticeable stylistic quirk of suddenly bringing up a contemporary reference yttrium is a very interesting element. it is used in record playe...
Need help?