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Transient and Strange

Notes on the Science of Life

Audiobook
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In her career as a science reporter, Nell Greenfieldboyce has reported from inside a space shuttle, the bottom of a coal mine, and the control room of a particle collider; she's presented news on the color of dinosaur eggs, ice worms that live on mountaintop glaciers, and signs of life on Venus. In this, her debut book, she delivers a wholly original collection of powerful, emotionally raw, and unforgettable personal essays that probe the places where science touches our lives most intimately.
Expertly weaving her own experiences of motherhood and marriage with an almost devotional attention to the natural world, Greenfieldboyce grapples with the weighty dualities of life: birth and death, constancy and impermanence, memory and doubt, love and aging. She looks for a connection to the universe by embarking on a search for the otherworldly glint of a micrometeorite in the dust, consults meteorologists and storm chasers on the eerie power of tornadoes to soothe her children's anxieties, and processes her adolescent oblivion through the startling discovery of black holes.
A beautiful blend of explanatory science, original reporting, and personal experience, Transient and Strange captures the ache of ordinary life, offering resonant insights into both the world around us and the worlds within us.
Two bonus stories, "Santa" and "Paperclips," are featured at the end of the audiobook.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from November 13, 2023
      This artful debut essay collection from NPR science correspondent Greenfieldboyce mixes scientific anecdotes with intimate personal reflections. In “What Else Is There,” Greenfieldboyce describes the achievements of Harvey Nininger, a 20th-century amateur meteorite researcher known for discovering large amounts of space debris on Earth, while framing her own quest to find tiny meteorites on her property as a quixotic attempt to come into contact with “something ethereal that I’m not equipped to recognize and probably won’t ever truly understand.” “A Very Charming Young Black Hole” recounts Greenfieldboyce’s struggle to determine if she should trust a note from her younger self suggesting her first kiss was a 22-year-old who hit on her in a hotel lobby when she was 12, though she can’t remember kissing him. She traces how the scientific understanding of black holes has developed since her birth in 1974 and uses the cosmic entity as a metaphor to interrogate whether her memory of what happened that night is, like anything that enters a black hole, irretrievable. Elsewhere, Greenfieldboyce touches on her son’s fear of tornadoes, her ambivalent efforts to ensure her children didn’t inherit her husband’s genetic kidney disease, and the “symbolic power” of fleas (“Is there not something to be said for the universe and all generations re-created in the small and unremarkable?”). The inventive juxtaposition of science with autobiography yields unexpected insights buoyed by evocative prose. Greenfieldboyce dazzles with her auspicious first outing.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Nell Greenfieldboyce is an NPR science reporter, so it's no surprise that she has clarity of both argument and speech in her performance of her personal essays. Topics range from the miniscule--fleas, cosmic dust--to the life changing--her difficulty in getting pregnant and her husband's polycystic kidney disease. But all are filled with wit and self-deprecating humor. When her son asks about tornadoes, she gives a scientific explanation and then must backpedal to assure him that the odds of a tornado hitting the area where they live are tiny. The audio version includes bonus essays. In one, a question about Santa Claus sums up her scientific enthusiasm: Children exhibit an inquisitiveness that a scientist would recognize, and when faced with something unfamiliar, they don't revel in awe but try to figure out the answer. A.B. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine

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