A Q&A-style collection of 162 science columns originally published in the San Diego Union-Tribune. The information didn’t really engage me or stick with me. I’m not much of a science reader, and that was no doubt at play, but I try to stretch my interests with my reading. Despite being intended for general readers, her answers often became too technical to understand. Even the author (or her editor) seems aware of it in this line in response to a question about gray hair: “Hair color depends on the presence or absence of the pigment melanin, which is produced in organelles called melanosomes within cells called melanocytes by the process of (don’t worry, tedium does not cause gray hair) melanogenesis.” It’s all very well to give a technical answer, but if the book isn’t written for science majors, there needs to be an effort to translate the scientific language to make it more accessible. This may be difficult in a newspaper where there’s limited space, but in a book, she could have revised and added more. I’ll also acknowledge that it’s a very special skill set to be highly knowledgeable in a subject but be able to explain it to a novice, let alone also make it engaging. Basically, the author isn’t really a gifted teacher, and it seems like there’s a mismatch between the content and the target audience at times.
She does effectively debunk a fair number of myths. I just wasn’t all that interested in many of them. To be fair, this is probably more of a flip-through-and-just-read-the-answers-that-interest-you book, and I read it cover to cover in small increments, because that’s how I usually read. And I rate on based on my personal experience of a book; another reader may enjoy this more.
Despite being published by a major publisher (Pearson), the interior layout is bizarre. Sometimes, the next question will immediately follow on the same page, other times, it will start on the next page as if a new chapter, leaving a lot of white space throughout—sometimes more than half a page is blank for no reason. There doesn’t seem to be any pattern to this. I suspect that they didn’t use an interior designer to lay out the text for printing, and just converted a Word document or eBook which had page breaks that looked good in that format, but messed up the spacing in the printed book.