Meteorites by authors Caroline Smith, Sara Russell, and Gretchen Benedix, all of them with UK's Natural History Museum, has concisely represented the (nearly) current state of the known here in this little book, at first glance in the similarly slim, hardcover style of a children's book, but packed with scientific information not too esoteric as to put off the less mathematical among us. Since its publication, NASA's Stardust mission has looked at the artificial crater made in comet Tempel 1 by the projectile of another NASA mission, Deep Impact, the ESA's Rosetta mission has visited comet P67 Churyumov-Gerasimenko with the lander Philae, and the OSIRIS-Rex mission has visited and sampled asteroid Bennu. In other words, it is an exciting time to read this tidy book amid the scientific returns of long-term space missions which include lunar and Martian sample missions. Our understanding of the solar system and its dynamic interaction with the interstellar medium is informing us of how the planets came to be, and how other systems might have formed. No sooner did I put the book down than Dutch computer scientists made a map of places in Antarctica to potentially find many more space rocks. The collectors among us will be intrigued by this. By the time you finish reading, you will want to discover meteorites of your own, and you will know what to look for. Happy hunting!