The Floating Egg begins with the search for an alchemist’s secret and ends with the re-imagination of a past world. Each chapter is connected to a particular corner of northeast England, and each explores the uncertain line where myth is dissolved into science and belief gives way to knowledge. For example, one episode shows how the fall of Constantinople converted the common rock of the Yorkshire cliffs into a source of extraordinary wealth and power, and how this, in turn, uncovered the inhabitants of a succession of past worlds. The stories move from documentary accounts to fictional recreations of historic events, from contemporary writings and illustrations to present-day reflection. By using different ways of describing the world of scientific endeavor, the author has produced a fascinating, visually beautiful, and highly entertaining book that allows us to witness the birth of a new science—geology.
Roger Osborne was a publisher of scientific, medical and technical books before becoming a full-time writer. He is the author of The Floating Egg and The Deprat Affair.
Hurrah for National trust second hand book shops. A history of geology focused on North Yorkshire. Told through lots of primary sources (when can I start writing letters signed “your most obedient servant”?) A wonderful read.
Interesting read about my favourite landsapes .I particularly enjoyed the chapter about the meteor 'falling from the heavens' .I've always known that this part of the country was special but didn't realise that my fossil hunting on Redcar/Saltburn beach could uncover something altogether bigger and better than an elephant's toenail. I'm now looking for a plesiosaur.
My first non-fiction book in ages. Probably very enjoyable to geology buffs or people interested in the history of English science - it feeds right in to Dr Strange and Mr Norrel. It also gave me an unbearable urge to travel to Whitby and look at the fossils and glacial land up that way.
I read a fair amount in the history of geology and paleontology, so I almost passed this one by when I saw it at the museum in Whitby, thinking I already knew a lot of the stories already. Fortunately, my friend bought it for me. Yes, I did know some of the stories (Kirkdale Cave, the meteorite, etc., big stories that are well known in the field), but I hadn't noticed that Osborne focuses mostly on the 19th-century Yorkshire coast. Oh! Lots of local stories I knew nothing about, and they're fascinating! I now know a bit about alum, jet, and a brilliant theorist who died far too young.
Osborne knows how to explain the state of scientific understanding of what are now accepted as the basic facts of geology, and in a highly entertaining manner. I love it that each chapter takes a different approach: one is nearly all extensive quotes from letters involving museums arguing over who would get a particularly good fossil; another is a fictionalized imagining of a real journey to York; another is about the founding of a geological museum. The variety of approaches keeps things fresh and moving along
Highly recommended if you enjoy nonfiction and are at all curious about the natural world and how science has learned to explore it over the last couple of centuries.
A series of episodes, in different voices, which manages to combine a history of the science of geology, a geological history of the East coast of Yorkshire, a true alchemist's secret, the real value of Captain Cook's voyages, and wonderful heated discussions between eminent geologists over the costs of purchasing near complete fossil skeletons - this book had everything. I laughed out loud at points, was taken back in memory to wonderful views from the York Moors, the significance of which I only now realise, thanks to this book.