Genes, Girls and Gamow

Author:   James D. Watson
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198509769


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   01 November 2001
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Genes, Girls and Gamow


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Overview

"In 1953 Watson and Crick discovered the double helical structure of DNA and Watson's personal account of the discovery, ""The Double Helix"", was published in 1968. ""Genes, Girls and Gamow"" is also autobiographical, covering the period from when ""The Double Helix"" ends, in 1953, to a few years later, and ending with a Postscript bringing the story up to date. Here is Watson adjusting to new-found fame, carrying out tantalizing experiments on the role of DNA in biology, and falling in love. The book is enlivened with copies of handwritten letters from the larger than life character of George Gamow, who had made significant contributions to physics but became intrigued by genes, DNA and the elusive genetic code. This is a tale of heartbreak, infidelity, scientific excitement and ambition, laced with travelogue and '50s atmosphere."

Full Product Details

Author:   James D. Watson
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Weight:   0.709kg
ISBN:  

9780198509769


ISBN 10:   0198509766
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   01 November 2001
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Peter Pauling: Foreword. List of Illustrations. Cast of Characters. Preface. Acknowledgments. Prologue. 1: Cambridge (England): April 1953. 2: Cambridge (England): April-May 1953. 3: Cold Spring Harbor: June 1953. 4: Cambridge (England): July-August 1953. 5: New Haven, Northern Indiana, and Pasadena: September 1953. 6: Pasadena, Northern Indiana, and the East Coast: October 1953-January 1954. 7: Bethesda, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and Pasadena: January-February 1954. 8: Pasadena: February 1954. 9: Pasadena, Berkely, Urbana, Gatlinburg, and the East Coast: March-April 1954. 10: Pasadena: May 1954. 11: Woods Hole: June 1954. 12: Woods Hole: July 1954. 13: Woods Hole: August 1954. 14: Woods Hole, New Hampshire, and Cambridge (Mass.): August 1954. 15: Northern Indiana and Pasadena: September 1954. 16: Pasadena: October 1954. 17: Pasadena and Berkeley: November-December 1954. 18: Northern Indiana, Cambridge (Mass.), and Washington D.C.: December 1954-January 1955. 19: Pasadena and Berkeley: February-March 1955. 20: The East Coast, Pasadena, and Woods Hole: March-June 1955. 21: Cambridge (England): July 1955. 22: The Continent: August 1955. 23: Cambridge (England), and Scotland: September 1955. 24: Cambridge (England): October 1955. 25: Tubingen, Munich, and Cambridge (England): November-December 1955. 26: English Lake District and Scotland: December 1955-January 1956. 27: Cambridge (England): January-February 1956. 28: Cambridge (England): February 1956. 29: Cambridge (England), Israel, and Egypt: March-April 1956. 30: Cambridge (England): May-June 1956. 31: Baltimore, Cold Spring Harbor, and Cambridge (Mass.): June-September 1956. Epilogue: October 1956-March 1968

Reviews

After winning the Nobel Prize for his discovery of the structure of DNA, young Jim Watson expected the girls to swoon over him. When they didn't, he set about pursuing them instead - with some hilarious consequences. This may not sound like the sort of autobiography you'd expect from one of the world's top scientists, but then Watson is a man of many surprises. The first part of his autobiography, The Double Helix, was published to worldwide acclaim in 1968. Watson told how, in his early 20s and barely out of Cambridge University, he and a few mates made the scientific discovery that revolutionised 20th-century science. It was a book full of humour and warmth - a galaxy removed from any previous scientist's writing. The formula in this belated follow-up is similar, telling of Jim's further scientific discoveries, his monumental blunders and his preoccupation with the opposite sex. The story resumes in 1953, where The Double Helix ended, and brings us forward to the present. Watson's diary format allows him to pour in all the intimacies that preoccupied a 20-something celebrity in the 1950s. There is plenty of science, some of it almost as complex as DNA although Watson does his best to demystify it; but the real gems come in his personal anecdotes of practical jokes, faux pas and friendships with some off-the-wall but likeable characters (that is where Gamow of the book's title comes in). The illustrations include many letters of the not-so-serious kind, and documents that show Watson was still making brilliant scientific progress despite his seemingly insouciant attitude. Nowadays Watson is engaged in cancer research and you wouldn't bet against him making another great discovery. If he does, you can't help thinking he'll have a whale of a time in the process. (Kirkus UK)


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