e99 Online Shopping Mall
Help | |
Home - Authors - Gleick James (Books) |
  | 1-20 of 78 | Next 20 |
click price to see details click image to enlarge click link to go to the store
1. Chaos: Making a New Science by James Gleick | |
Paperback: 352
Pages
(1988-12-01)
list price: US$20.00 -- used & new: US$5.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0140092501 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description This is not apurely technical book. Instead, it focuses as much on the scientistsstudying chaos as on the chaos itself. In the pages of Gleick's book,the reader meets dozens of extraordinary and eccentric people.Forinstance, Mitchell Feigenbaum, who constructed and regulated his lifeby a 26-hour clock and watched his waking hours come in and out ofphase with those of his coworkers at Los Alamos NationalLaboratory. As for chaos itself, Gleick does an outstanding job ofexplaining the thought processes and investigative techniques thatresearchers bring to bear on chaos problems. Rather than attempt toexplain Julia sets, Lorenz attractors, and the Mandelbrot Set withgigantically complicated equations, Chaos relies on sketches,photographs, and Gleick's wonderful descriptive prose. Customer Reviews (115)
Anecdote and Science
Intelligent, tantalizing, brisk popular science
Good
Great Introduction
Good narrative history of Chaos/Complexity |
2. Isaac Newton by James Gleick | |
Paperback: 288
Pages
(2004-06-08)
list price: US$15.00 -- used & new: US$8.55 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1400032954 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description From poor beginnings, Newton rose to prominence and wealth, and Gleick uses contemporary accounts and notebooks to track the genius's arc, much as Newton tracked the paths of comets. Without a single padded sentence or useless fact, Gleick portrays a complicated man whose inspirations required no falling apples. --Therese Littleton Customer Reviews (86)
Nice Introduction
Outstanding
Breezy, fast overview
Brief and insightful biography of a singular man
Newton light |
3. Chaos: Making a New Science by James Gleick | |
Paperback: 384
Pages
(2008-08-26)
list price: US$20.00 -- used & new: US$7.92 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0143113453 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (5)
An historical introduction to chaos theory
Keeps you engaged
Good book overall, too detailed sometimes
Insightful but tedious
Another excellent book for non-experts |
4. The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood by James Gleick | |
Hardcover: 544
Pages
(2011-03-01)
list price: US$28.95 -- used & new: US$19.11 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0375423729 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
5. Chaos by James Gleick | |
Hardcover: 354
Pages
(2004)
-- used & new: US$17.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1582881154 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (4)
A huge effort
Order from Chaos
The stories that switch on the lights!
Must Reading |
6. Genius : The Life and Science of Richard Feynman by James Gleick | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1992)
Asin: B001UBQ26Y Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Customer Reviews (56)
An engrossing story about a brilliant boy who never quite grew up
A Good Account
Well written review of Feynman's life and physics
Excellent book covering a very interesting life
An original mind |
7. Chaos the software by James Gleick | |
Paperback:
Pages
(1991)
-- used & new: US$12.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B000E3DD5M Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
8. Chaos: Making a New Science by James GLEICK | |
Hardcover: 445
Pages
(1987)
-- used & new: US$47.35 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 3426263351 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
9. Nature's Chaos by Eliot Porter, James Gleick | |
Paperback: 128
Pages
(2001-10-31)
list price: US$16.95 -- used & new: US$5.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0316609420 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (4)
Wonderful potential, poor execution
Beautiful and Profound These photographs of Eliot Porter--selected to provide an illustration and counterpoint to James Gleick's eloquent text--are among the most rapturously beautiful ever produced. They are the visual equivalent of poet Wallace Stevens' attempt to grasp that which lies beyond the limits of sentience. Looking through the original hardcover edition is both an act of meditation and of homage--to the greatness of creation, in all its mystery, as well as to the human need to think, feel, and reach for meaning.As I journey through these images, I ask myself, do we look out upon the universe from afar--or do we do so from within, as integral parts of the greater mystery?Let go...allow Gleick's text to pose the question--and Porter's photographs to frame the answer.
Great content, poor printing
A beautiful work that captures the natural essence of chaos Nihil. So I ordered it through Amazon.com. It arrived, ahead of schedule. I justified the price to myself because I had won a small award for a photograph that was inspired by Porter. The book is astounding. The text is lyrical and erudite, it flows and meshes with the startling images. I can't say much more-but if you are a photographer, or chaos buff, or god-help you both, then this is a requisite volume. Don't hesitate. Ta panta re! Jason Ramsay ... Read more |
10. Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything by James Gleick | |
Paperback: 352
Pages
(2000-09-05)
list price: US$16.95 -- used & new: US$2.72 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 067977548X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (41)
A bit of a disappointment
entertaining collection of observations
Faster: A List of Facts and Speculations
I disagreed with the entire premise of this book
" The faster we are forced to go, the slower we may need to go" |
11. Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything by James Gleick | |
Hardcover: 336
Pages
(1999-08-17)
list price: US$24.00 -- used & new: US$1.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0679408371 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Author ofthe pop-science triumph, Chaos, James Gleickbrings his formidable writing skills to bear here, creating an almostpoetic flow of ideas from what in other hands might have been just amass of interesting facts and anecdotes. Whether tracing the modernhistory of chronometry (from Louis-François Cartier's inventionof the wristwatch to the staggeringly precise atomic clocks of today'sstandards bureaus) or revealing the ways the camera has sped up oursubjective sense of pace (from the freeze frames of EadweardMuybridge's early photographic experiments to the jump cuts of MTV'slatest videos), Gleick manages to weave in slyly perceptive oroccasionally profound points about our increasingly hopped-uprelationship to time. The result is the kind of thing only anaccelerated culture like ours could have come up with: an instantclassic. --Julian Dibbell Customer Reviews (64)
Even more appropriate for 2010 than when written in 1999
Move over John A. McPhee, coming through
Fun and fast read -- take time out after to think about it
You will recognize your life in this book
Not what I expected/ |
12. What Just Happened: A Chronicle from the Information Frontier by James Gleick | |
Paperback: 320
Pages
(2003-06-10)
list price: US$13.00 -- used & new: US$4.44 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0375713913 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (6)
For a Gleick fan, this was disappointing
Funny and thoughtful, but somewhat outdated
Read it Soon , it is becoming more of a History Book every Day
Readable retrospective on the nineties in technology Author of the challenging Chaos and the very long and adoring Genius about physicist Richard Feynman and the more recent Faster, here Gleick gives us short and easy to appreciate recollections of the communications revolution.His observations are trenchant, mildly apocalyptic and/or gee-whizzed, amusing and very well expressed.Having good editors is something Gleick says he has been blessed with, and in these pieces it shows.This attractive book is simply a pleasure to read. The first piece is from 1992 about the bugs in software, in particular those in Microsoft's Word for Windows; and I want to tell you even though (or especially because) I use WordPerfect, I identified.I felt the aggravation.Gleick notes that software is unlike any other product in its complexity, an observation that no doubt pleases Microsoft's software engineers.However, he reports that Microsoft, unable to cope with the bugs munching on their code and unable or unwilling to excise them, came to an accommodation with the world by declaring that "It's not a bug--it's a feature," while compiling an in-company list of known bugs dubbed, "Won't Fix." And then, I guess, had lunch. My favorite essay in the collection is the one entitled "The End of Cash" beginning on page 143 in which Gleick notes among other things that issuers of digital cash cards expect to "profit generally from lost cards."He adds that "telephone companies and transit systems already figure gains ranging from 1 percent to a phenomenal 10 percent." (p. 152)This is an example of privatized "escheatment," an aptly named phenomenon in which governments have traditionally benefitted from lost coins and paper money, or people dying without heirs.Gleick reports that billions of pennies "simply vanish from the economy each year" which he cites as a "hidden cost of money." (pp. 157-158)But credit cards too have their hidden costs.They amount to a tax on those who do not use credit cards (basically the poor) because "the credit card companies have mostly succeeded in forbidding merchants to offer discounts for cash purchases."(So everybody buying the product shares the credit card transaction costs.) Gleick also looks into the changes that a cashless society will bring, noting what kinds of crime will no longer be worth doing (e.g., kidnaping for ransom, armed robbery.)He reflects on the phenomenon of "float" in which digital money can be used by financial institutions to earn interest for themselves.Gleick observes that holders of the Yankee dollar at home and world wide (think of the large safe-deposit drawers of Arabian sheiks) are actually lending "their wealth to the United States, interest free, just as holders of American Express traveler's checks lend their money to American Express." (p. 153) I also liked the essays on advertising ("Who Owns Your Attention") and on the growing lack of privacy ("Big Brother Is Us") and on the awesome power of Microsoft ("Making Microsoft Save for Capitalism").There are lesser essays on political websites... web browsing ("Here Comes the Spider") and software contracts between vendor and user ("Click OK to Agree"), etc.Finally Gleick notes that we are "Inescapably Connected" and gives on page 299 a weird but telling example of how we are being transformed.We are not yet "neurons in the new world brain," he observes, yet we have gotten so much in the habit of knowing things, or at least being able to find them out that "You get a twitchy feeling that you ought to push a button and pop up the answer." I've felt that, and soon a connecting chip may be inside my brain that really does do something like twitch as my synapses are activated by the World Wide Web.
An Unexpected Pleasure Looking back with the benefit of hindsight at things written about the Internet over the course of the last decade proves to be an illuminating exercise.It definitely seems to be a case of the more things change, the more they stay the same. Some of the things that have changed a lot since the time the original articles were published are: Some current issues that the book demonstrates have a much longer history are: As an added bonus, since it was written as technologies were emerging, the book provides the full name of things that are now only known by their acronyms.For instance, I've never known what ISDN stands for, but now I know that it's `Integrated Services Digital Network.' With the benefit of hindsight, we can see that some of Gleick's predictions were very prescient (e.g. the Y2K anti-climax), while others were less accurate or at least premature (e.g. cash becoming obsolete). All in all, the book provides a very enjoyable look through the rearview mirror. ... Read more |
13. Faster The Acceleration of Just About Everything by James Gleick | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1999)
-- used & new: US$107.30 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0356219321 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
14. Isaac Newton: Die Biografie by James Gleick | |
Hardcover: 260
Pages
Isbn: 3491962455 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
15. Schneller. Eine Gesellschaft auf der Suche nach der verlorenen Zeit. by James Gleick | |
Paperback:
Pages
(2001-09-01)
-- used & new: US$64.33 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 3404604970 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
16. La Théorie du chaos : Vers une nouvelle science by James Gleick, Christian Jeanmougin | |
Mass Market Paperback: 431
Pages
(1999-01-04)
Isbn: 208081219X Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
17. Genius: Richard Feynman and Modern Physics by James Gleick | |
Paperback: 544
Pages
(1994-04-02)
list price: US$22.70 -- used & new: US$16.03 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0349105324 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
18. Faster: Our Race Against Time by James Gleick | |
Paperback: 326
Pages
(2005-08-18)
list price: US$18.60 -- used & new: US$2.71 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0349112924 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (1)
I could hardly wait to read this book |
19. The Best American Science Writing 2000 by James Gleick, Jessie Cohen | |
Paperback: 272
Pages
(2000-09-05)
list price: US$14.00 -- used & new: US$13.02 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: B000H2MRY8 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description The first volume in this annual series of the best science writing by Americans -- meticulously selected by bestselling author James Gleick, one of our foremost chroniclers of scientific social history debuts with a stellar collection of writers and thinkers. Nobel laureate physicist Steven Weinberg bracingly challenges the idea that the universe has a designer; Pulitzer Prize winner Natalie Angier reassesses caveman (and cavewoman) couture; bestselling author and Darwinian theorist Stephen Jay Gould makes a claim for the man whose ideas Darwin discredited; mathematician and cognitive theorist Douglas R. Hofstadter explores the thought patterns that make the human mind unique; Timothy Ferris proposes a realistic alternative to warp-speed intersteller travel; neurologist and bestselling author Oliver Sacks reminisces about his first loves -- chemistry and math. The Best American Science Writing 2000 covers the full range of scientific inquiry -- from biochemistry, physics, and astronomy to genetics, evolutionary theory, cognition, and even ants. Many of these cutting-edge essays offer glimpses of new realms of discovery and thought, exploring territory that is unfamiliar to most of us or finding the unexpected in the midst of the familiar. Harvard historian Peter Galison takes us into the Bern patent office as Einstein formulates his theory of special relativity; neural scientist Denis G. Pelli shows how Chuck Close's spellbinding portraits actually overturn conventional wisdom about how we see; the young surgeon Atul Gawande exposes the split-second decision making that goes on in hospital emergency rooms around the country. As James Gleick writes in the Introduction: "We need the news they're delivering. The more we read this year, the more we saw that our technocratic age requires urgent messages from the sometimes baffling, sometimes tumultuous frontier of knowledge." This diverse, stimulating, and accessible collection is required reading for anyone who wants to travel to that frontier. Customer Reviews (7)
Misnamed or Misedited...be warned! Furthermore, there would seem to be a weird bias present in the selection of the essays.A lot of them are from the New Yorker or the New York Times, hardly the places to go for good science (even though I do acknowledge that when it comes to newspapers the New York Times does better than most...which are terrible in general).There are some from the Sciences, Nature, but not many from places where real science essays are published.I suspect the net was not cast far in a search.How about Science News, Discover, Analog, Scientific American?I am also sure there were more overlooked great science essays in books that were not read (a few such are included and tend to be among the best in the collection).There is even a farcical "essay" from The Onion here! Gleick explains/justifies this in his introduction claiming to take a "big tent" approach.After reading the volume I think he failed.The tent wasn't big enough to retain enough science to validate the title. The essays I like in particular included Lord of the Flies by Jonathan Weiner, Antarctic Dreams by Francis Halzen, Interstellar Spaceflight by Timothy Ferris, Einstein's Clocks by Peter Galison, and A Desinger Universe by Steven Weinberg. Two stood out in my mind as particular poor examples of science writing mainly because they embrace "anti-science" in order to be "witty."Natalie Angier's New York Times article "Furs for Evening, but Cloth Was the Stone Age Standby" examines the recent realization that 20-30k year old fertility figures are shown wearing complex textiles.She may just be reporting the shoddy methodology of some current archeological practices, but she proudly announces that the old assumption that men created these statuettes is wrong based on the detailed textile carving that requires detailed knowledge of such and the cross-cultural studies of the present population of earth that indicates women create cloth, not men.I think the announcement is quite premature and just as big of an assumption.It feels like one of those essays that projects present-day sensibilities on past times, a form of political correctness that has no place in science. Worse is "Must Dog Eat Dog" by Susan McCarthy from salon.com.McCarthy attacks sociobiological thought but displays an astounding level of ignorance about the details of the theories involved.She attacks a straw man of her own invention in which men must be homeless, starving, lecherous slobs in order to validate sociobiology.She simply cannot have read some of the thinkers she attacks and have written the piece she did.She argues from a political motivation, not from a scientific one, and I was quite shocked to see this essay included."Witty" it may be, but science it ain't! This is an interesting collection, but be aware of what is actually included here.Good science is going on in the world today, and people are writing about it, just usually not in the New Yorker.
Interesting, but not "The Best"
A Very Mixed Bag
amusing, but very patchy writing skills Mixed in are pieces like Susan McCarthy (fromSalon) that use poor argumentative style (numerous ad hominem attacks, the use of Capital Letter sarcasm), poorly researched and develop no thesis of her own. Just scattershot bon mots and drive-by name dropping. some good with the bad.worth an afternoon, the articles are light on actual content.pop-science.
Terrific collection Each essay in this collection takes you into the world of a specific science and the scientists who are patient enough to stay with their explorations and articulate enough to describe them to others.Some of my favorite authors are in this collection: Stephen J. Gould, Susan McCarthy, and Oliver Sachs.A treat for the mind. ~~Joan Mazza, author of DREAM BACK YOUR LIFE; DREAMING YOUR REAL SELF; WHO'S CRAZY ANYWAY? and 3 books in The Guided Journal Series with Writer's Digest Books. ... Read more |
20. Chaos: Making a New Science by James Gleick | |
Hardcover:
Pages
(1989)
Asin: B000KYU4DE Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
  | 1-20 of 78 | Next 20 |