This book is still fairly useful for someone interested in the history of the "science wars" but its usefulness is severely hampered by the fact that it is strongly biased toward one "side" (that of E.O. Wilson, Dawkins et al) and routinely derides, misrepresents, and even personally insults the critics of sociobiology, biological determinism etc.
A tiresome amount of space in the book is devoted to gossip or just insults about Lewontin et al from both their colleagues and the author herself (who inserts herself into this "history" frequently). Even small things like the choice of adjectives for the two groups is blatantly biased. Constant excuses are made for when the sociobiologists display "bad" behavior, explaining how their hands were forced, while there is never an attempt at a charitable interpretation of their critics. Exchanges between the factions are frequently left with the "last word" going to the sociobiologist camp, who also get far more quotes both explaining their positions and criticizing that of their critics. A strong effort is made to put the sociobiologists into proper context and a similarly strong one is made to take their critics out of it.
Perhaps most annoyingly the author persists in declaring the critics of sociobiology to be "environmentalists" or "nurturists" when every major critic of sociobiology quite regularly attacked the nature/nurture dichotomy altogether as facile and misleading. This is actually something some of the sociobiologists did as well although here the author bothers to mention it as a means of defending them from accusations of genetic determinism.
If this had been presented as a autobiographical polemic arguing for the baselessness of Lewontin, Gould, Levins, et al's criticisms it might've received 3 stars from me. It is not convincing in that regard but as I said it *is* a useful historical resource and I would've appreciated the honesty.
Also the title, blurb, introduction and the fact the the author is a sociologist had led me to believe the book would attempt to take an overarching sociological view of the "wars" and maybe even use these episodes to analyze how science operates as an institution, what exactly "truth" means here, and what this can add to sociology/philosophy of science. Unfortunately there is almost none of this in the book. While the title ostensibly refers to both sides of the debate it's clear the author believes the critics of sociobiology were a bunch of confused pompous ideologues attempting to hinder "progress" and unfairly attacking the real Truth as revealed Wilson et al.
This hinders the obvious goal of the author because the shoddiness of the attacks undermines where it really *does* point out some issues with the critics such as their initial problems coming up with a positive antireductionist program, Gould's clamoring for the spotlight and his penchant for GREAT BIG THEORIES which at least matched Wilson's, their wishy-washiness about whether their politics informed their science (unlike the author I believe it did for BOTH sides and the belief in an apolitical science is both absurd and itself a political statement). I assume book this is meant to preach to the choir but if I were someone "on the fence" or without much knowledge about the subject I would probably question all the author's assertions based on their extreme and obvious bias.
Most unfortunately perhaps we are given a one-sided view on how echoes of this debate are felt today. We're left with the idea that once these wacky leftists piped down Wilson, Dawkins et al were finally left alone while they transformed science. Being only spiteful critics with no positive program to put forward the wacky leftists all faded away.
We are not informed about Lewontin et al's influence on so many modern areas of biology from broad theoretical perspectives like Developmental Systems Theory and Extended Evolutionary Sythesis (which, whether you agree with it or not is also influenced by Wilson's advocacy of group selection) or more minor things like how they influenced how people think about, talk about, and emphasize niche construction, exaptation,"complexity, contingency, epigenetics, Neutral Theory etc. It's inescapable that those people transformed the landscape of modern science just as much as the sociobiologists but the author either does not know this or does not want it known. Even a hateful dismissal of how they've influenced things would've been useful.
So with so many complaints why am I even bothering to give this book 2 stars? Because as of right now it's all we have. There is another book focusing on Dawkins and Gould but, to my knowledge anyway, this is the only book analyzing this notable clash in the history of science from such a broad perspective. Maybe someday down the line some future iteration of Gould --a working, creative scientist that is also a talented writer for the public that *also* is skilled at historical analysis-- can approach this and give a proper (I won't say "balanced" but perhaps less ireful) account of these episodes and put them into the broader context of the philosophy of science to boot.
P.S. I have plenty of further gripes but one I feel I should really add is that virtually no attention is paid to the feminist critiques (or critics) of sociobiology. Ruth Hubbard is mentioned twice. Once in a list of names, and once parenthetically. Elisabeth Lloyd is mentioned once parenthetically. Ruth Bleier is not mentioned at all. Evelyn Fox-Keller is not mentioned at all. The only mention of feminism is when the author attempts to paint Wilson as the victim of a feminist witch hunt due to his speculative statements regarding the supposed disposition of men toward politics, business, and science and of women toward... home life. They didn't understand he was merely speculating, we are told.