Book Summary
This book is meant to touch on the history of Pluto from discovery to the debate over its classification to the inevitable demotion by the International Astronomical Union, while mentioning a selection of efforts around the globe to inspire governments and the public alike to fund deeper research into the planet's origins and current state.
Positive Notes:
- It provides moderately insightful information on Pluto and the history it has had within the astronomical community since its discovery.
Negative Notes
- For a book attempting to discuss and debate the planetary categorization of a celestial body, it is odd how often children are brought up as an argument for keeping Pluto classed as a planet. The book is written using relatively complex ideas including dynamics, spectrographs, scientific debate, yet the author continuously falls back to phrasing along the lines of “Pluto should remain a planet as that’s what is easiest and best for children”. Is this book for adults, or for elementary schoolers who are so pivotal to the authors argument? Really, you'd think that this review is joking, however, they are a continuous theme all the way to the end of the text. I cannot understand why the most common talking point throughout the book is the opinions of our youth. This isn't to say that their opinions and feelings are irrelevant, because as one of the children who was brought up with Pluto being a "planet", I too was shocked by the findings of the IAU. But, with time came a deeper understanding of both sides of the metaphorical "horizon" of the argument, and the dwarf-planet "hemisphere" wins out.
- It is somewhat difficult to take seriously when the author is quoting pop-culture references from sports columnists, late night talk show hosts, or elaborating on equivalencies that don’t appear to have any reasonable comparison to the argument as to why Pluto should remain a planet.
- There exists a section of the book spanning a handful of pages where the author attempted to provide visual aids which attempt to show aspects of Pluto or its history. I say “attempted” because it is my opinion that a book rooted in debate over a topic should be empirical, factual, and void of text, images, or sources that are artistic in nature. That is not to say images cannot supplement the material, but the images should not be artistic renderings opposed to genuine captures. Yes, this book was written in 2010, before the arrival of the New Horizons craft meant to study the planet, yes some of the images are from the Hubble or ground based telescopes, but dispersed between the real are man-made 3D model renders attempting to depict what the planet COULD be like. I give credit to the author for explicitly stating which images are imaginative in nature, but the moment artistic style creeps its way into an image or system, physical and empirical integrity is lost.
- The book includes facts in some instances that while true, have no place in the context in which they’re mentioned. For example, in chapter 9 “The Battle of Prague”, where the author is sharing an opinion, the text reads “some of the most interesting worlds nowadays aren’t planets, but moons. The Saturnian moon Enceladus is just 300 miles wide, far smaller than Pluto’s diameter of 1,430 miles, ...” The message doesn’t make much sense in attempting to classify Pluto and reads more akin to standing atop a soap box to proclaim to anyone within earshot that your left foot is smaller than your right, but that doesn’t make the left foot any less interesting. It is an opinion that likely should have been kept out of the material entirely.
Final Verdict
I cannot in conscious mind recommend this book, unless an emotionally charged, childish outcry over an established Kuiper Belt object’s demotion is what you’re looking for. There's a reason that even 19 years after the initial decision, Pluto is still classified as a dwarf-planet, and that reason is because the numerous attempts to reinstate the initial planetary statehood of the cold, distant, icy rock that is Pluto have failed.
I encourage all to go into the book with an open mind and take note of what page you reach when you turn against the author simply because of how poorly worded, how inadequately defended, and how mis-managed the argument upon the entire premise of the book is based. Take it a step further and predict the page number before you’ve read it, then compare that estimate to the measured value after finishing the text. The results may surprise you.