Acclaimed science writer and physicist Dr. Paul Halpern is the author of fourteen popular science books, exploring the subjects of space, time, higher dimensions, dark energy, dark matter, exoplanets, particle physics, and cosmology. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Fulbright Scholarship, and an Athenaeum Literary Award. A regular contributor to NOVA's "The Nature of Reality" physics blog, he has appeared on numerous radio and television shows including "Future Quest" and "The Simpsons 20th Anniversary Special".
Halpern's latest book, "Einstein's Dice and Schrodinger's Cat," investigates how physicists Albert Einstein and Erwin Schrodinger battled together against the incompleteness and indeterminacy of quantum mechanics. Their dialogue inspired Schrodinger's famous thought-experiment about a cat in a box that is in a mixed state between life and death until it is observed. They struggled to find a unified field theory that would unite the forces of nature and supersede quantum weirdness. Sadly they would never find success and their efforts would lead to a fiasco.
More information about Paul Halpern's books and other writings can be found at: phalpern.com
Read this one years ago. I think this was the first book I read about wormholes, with the exception maybe of Hawking's first popular book. This is a popular, non-mathematical account of wormholes and possible time machines and some related topics. I enjoyed the author's narrative/speculation about the Monolith in "2001:A Space Oddysey" being some sort of opening to a wormhole (a.k.a a "stargate") which Dave Bowman entered and fell through at the end of the movie.
I found this in the old/not regularly used-book-giveaway the library I currently work had, and I only picked it up because I had started watching Farscape at the time, so it was relevant to my interests (I'm looking at you, Scorpy). It turned out an interesting enough read; although it did come off as a bit dated at times (after all it was written 20 years ago).