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How to Live Forever: And 34 Other Really Interesting Uses of Science

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Are you baffled by complex scientific theories? Do you think science is only for boffins in white coats?

In How to Live Forever Alok Jha brings to life thirty-five key science ideas in a way that can be understood by everyone.

From the microscopic to the cosmic, this book takes you on glorious tour of the known universe and beyond, embracing alien worlds, bizarre life forms, quantum weirdness, parallel dimensions, and dissected brains along the way.

You'll discover how to travel through time, how to boil a planet, how to turn sunbeams into oak trees, and much more.

391 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2011

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68 people want to read

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Alok Jha

20 books11 followers

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Kieran Atter.
64 reviews
April 17, 2020
My first gripe is that it contains very little chemistry (the best science!) More importantly, the chapters vary from really easy, 11-year-old level science, up to ridiculously difficult concepts to grasp in 10 short pages. I still have no idea what it was on about with the 11 dimensions of string theory for one. My final issue with this book is the fact that it repeats itself many times. Perhaps some of the chapters could have been merged and made slightly longer?
Profile Image for Tina.
601 reviews35 followers
June 25, 2014
A good read, but I am sure I read most of this elsewhere, in Focus magazine or New Scientist or perhaps in another Alok Jha book? I know a lot of the things in here I skipped because it was familiar.
Profile Image for Joel.
259 reviews6 followers
January 5, 2016
After a year of it sitting half-read next to the bed gathering dust I had to give up on this one.

The science in it is interesting, definitely, but I just didn't find its presentation engaging enough to motivate me to come back to it: definitely a personal preference thing.
Profile Image for Nabilah.
274 reviews50 followers
July 1, 2013
I was disappointed by the lack of references and citations. Popular science books should not be missing these.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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