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Transient and Strange: Notes on the Science of Life
Transient and Strange: Notes on the Science of Life | Nell Greenfieldboyce
4 posts | 2 read | 5 to read
An astonishing debut from the beloved NPR science correspondent: intimate essays about the intersection of science and everyday life. 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; shes 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 childrens anxieties, and processes her adolescent oblivion through the startling discovery of black holes. Inspired throughout by Walt Whitmans invocation to the transient and strange, she remains attuned to the wildest workings of our world, reflecting on the incredible leap of the humble flea or the echoing truth of a fetal heartbeat. 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.
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Chelsea.Poole
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NPR science writer Nell Greenfieldboyce is curious about this world. So am I! Here, she‘s collected essays on her life through the lens of science: her relationship with her father is explored through meteorites, her fertility journey and relationship with her husband dives into the science of IVF. Perfectly melding emotions with the scientific in a variety of topics, this is a winner for me! Started in print but audio is great!

sarahbarnes I love Nell! 3mo
youneverarrived You‘ve been reading some interesting sounding books! 🤍 3mo
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monalyisha
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I applied to undergrad as a Journalism major & never took a single Journalism class. As soon as I realized what kind of writing it required (in a word: spare), I was out. 🙈 I‘m telling this story because Greenfieldboyce, the author of Transient & Strange, is an American radio journalist, the science correspondent for NPR. I‘m sure that she delighted in the freedom to write as much (or as little) as she wanted in this memoir-essay collection. 👇🏻

monalyisha 1/1: Unfortunately, I found her short-form essays to be much more powerful (“Spider at the window”, “A Moment of silence”) — not necessarily in content but they were so impressively well-crafted! Fortunately, I was also thoroughly delighted by some of the longer ones (“What else is there?”, “A life so precious as a flea‘s”, “A very charming young black hole”). Most fortunately of all, I found the book as a whole compelling & supremely readable. (edited) 10mo
monalyisha *A note about the cover: it‘s my favorite cover design in years and years. The meteoroids depicted are shiny, raised, and metallic. It suddenly hit me, about 3/4 through the collection & partway-through a pet, that the featured colors were those I listed as childhood favorites. Whenever anyone asked, I‘d exclaim, “Black, silver, and HOT BLUE!” What a (fitting) blast from the past! ☄️💫 10mo
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monalyisha
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“Maybe all I‘ll ever do is quietly sort through a bunch of ordinary, sometimes beautiful stuff, searching for something ethereal that I‘m not equipped to recognize and probably won‘t ever truly understand.”

📸: Lessy Sebastian

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monalyisha
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“Despite what‘s taught in school about the scientific method, much of scientific inquiry, like poetry, involves play and metaphor and idiosyncratic obsessions and just plain fiddling around with mysterious things, things that are — to borrow a phrase from Walt Whitman — transient and strange.”

Starting this slim book book of essays this morning, by NPR science correspondent Greenfieldboyce. Look at me, reading nonfic *in print!* Who IS she? 💁‍♀️

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