Here’s a new review of Microcosm: E. coli and the New Science of Life in The Journal of Clinical Investigation. (Open access–most excellent.) The reviewer likes the book: “Mr. Zimmer has woven a fascinating tapestry, intercalating the energy of world-changing scientific discovery with the fascinating complexity of a well-understood living organism. His work will be welcomed by the scientist and the science enthusiast.”

On the other hand, it’s a little queasy to read that I’m “an American science writer at the zenith of his profession.” Does that mean it’s downhill from here?

Continue reading “More Microcosm News: “A Fascinating Tapestry” and a Paperback in the Works”

Having emerged from my turkey-induced coma, I have regained my powers of speech and am ready for two talks I’ve got this week:

Monday (today, December 1), I’ll be talking about science writing at a Master’s Tea at Saybrook College at Yale University at 4. It’s open to Yale students and faculty.

On Thursday at 7 pm I’ll be talking at Rockefeller University in Manhattan, as part of the NYC Skeptics Public Lecture Series. The title of the talk is “The Darwin Beat.” Here are more details. Admission is free.

Continue reading “Yale and Rockefeller U: This Week In Talk”

Last night I strapped on a bow tie and shot out my tuxedo cuffs, got in the car, and headed to the upper West Side to celebrate a global cataclysm. Actually, I was helping to celebrate the geologist who discovered the cataclysm. Walter Alvarez was receiving the Vetlesen Prize, the highest honor in the earth sciences.

Under the magnificent rotunda at Columbia’s Low Library, we sat down to dinner. Michael Purdy, the director of Columbia’s Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory, kicked off the event by explaining that Alvarez was winning the award because he had changed the way earth scientists view the history of the Earth.

Continue reading “A Catastrophic Career”