Hello everyone! I'm currently conducting a study for my MA thesis, and I've received a lot of help from an upper secondary school teacher, who in return asked me to find her some good popular science books. I immediately thought of this forum, as there seem to be a lot of people here who read a lot and are interested in science, so I would like to hear your recommendations. Basically I'm looking for books that are written well (in an entertaining and interesting fashion) and are not way too advanced or technical; books that have opened your eyes or completely revolutionized the way you think about certain things. Anything that's really changed you. There are of course lists like
this on the internet but I would really like to hear
your reviews of the best popular science books from all areas of science.
I myself read a very good book a while back called
The Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality by Brian Greene. I've never been much of a science nerd and the book really made me understand why the idea of quantum mechanics is so revolutionary in the world of physics and what it's actually all about. It's written very well: it's understandable to anyone who has a grasp of very basic mathematical concepts, but it still moves forward with a nice pace and doesn't patronize. It cleared up many things for me that I have found confusing about relativity and spacetime. I definitely recommend it to anyone who hasn't studied physics but is interested in things like the theory of general and special relativity, quantum mechanics, the big bang and string theory.
At the moment I also have Hawking's
A Brief History of Time and Oliver Sacks's
The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat on my shelf but I haven't had the time to read them yet.