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A Short History of Nearly Everything Audible Audiobook – Unabridged

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 18,056 ratings

One of the world’s most beloved and bestselling writers takes his ultimate journey -- into the most intriguing and intractable questions that science seeks to answer.

In
A Walk in the Woods, Bill Bryson trekked the Appalachian Trail -- well, most of it. In In A Sunburned Country, he confronted some of the most lethal wildlife Australia has to offer. Now, in his biggest book, he confronts his greatest challenge: to understand -- and, if possible, answer -- the oldest, biggest questions we have posed about the universe and ourselves. Taking as territory everything from the Big Bang to the rise of civilization, Bryson seeks to understand how we got from there being nothing at all to there being us. To that end, he has attached himself to a host of the world’s most advanced (and often obsessed) archaeologists, anthropologists, and mathematicians, travelling to their offices, laboratories, and field camps. He has read (or tried to read) their books, pestered them with questions, apprenticed himself to their powerful minds. A Short History of Nearly Everythingis the record of this quest, and it is a sometimes profound, sometimes funny, and always supremely clear and entertaining adventure in the realms of human knowledge, as only Bill Bryson can render it. Science has never been more involving or entertaining.


From the Hardcover edition.

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Product details

Listening Length 18 hours and 13 minutes
Author Bill Bryson
Narrator Richard Matthews
Whispersync for Voice Ready
Audible.com Release Date May 04, 2003
Publisher Random House Audio
Program Type Audiobook
Version Unabridged
Language English
ASIN B0000U7N00
Best Sellers Rank #518 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals)
#1 in Science Essays & Commentary (Books)
#1 in Natural History (Audible Books & Originals)
#1 in Astronomy (Audible Books & Originals)

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4.6 out of 5 stars
18,056 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book easy to read and engaging. They appreciate the well-researched and clear explanations of complex ideas. The humor and style keep the content entertaining. Readers appreciate the concise yet comprehensive history coverage. Overall, they describe the book as a must-read for anyone interested in learning more about science and history.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

1,195 customers mention "Readability"1,124 positive71 negative

Customers find the book easy to read and engaging. They appreciate the background details and anecdotes about famous scientists. The book is described as a fun and accessible read that makes science accessible to anyone.

"...He absolutely enraptures the reader and makes one wonder how we even figured anything out at all...." Read more

"...A thoroughly enjoyable and stimulating book which does not pretend to be scientific, but is more about scientists and how they have changed the way..." Read more

"...He meets with a wonderful cast of men and women to highlight the personalities behind the stories of discovery...." Read more

"...Granted some more than others, but he's never done a bad book. His wit shines through." Read more

781 customers mention "Information quality"745 positive36 negative

Customers find the book informative and well-researched. The author's unique prose breaks down complex ideas and explains discoveries in an understandable way for the average person. They appreciate the human side of science provided through characters, making science accessible to anyone. Readers also mention that the book provides thorough and extensive notations and bibliographies, making it a useful guide to get an abstract view of science.

"...also fortunate that his unique prose serves as a perfect tool for breaking down complex ideas and explaining discoveries and natural science from..." Read more

"...This book is chock-full of homages to famous scientists and many who were less lauded...." Read more

"...himself and ultimately delivered a lively, accessible, and mostly scientifically faithful, albeit cursory, proem to the history of the universe as..." Read more

"Full of information about how things come about, one thing leading to another. An important reminder that nothing happens in a void...." Read more

378 customers mention "Humor"374 positive4 negative

Customers enjoy the book's humor. They find it witty, informative, and easy to read. The author has a wry sense of humor that shines through, making the topics fun and accessible. The book is described as lively and engaging, conveying the joy and excitement of science.

"...narrative that he excels at, we are also fortunate that his unique prose serves as a perfect tool for breaking down complex ideas and explaining..." Read more

"...It is an entertaining romp through, well, just about everything, as the title suggests...." Read more

"...Bryson set an ambitious task for himself and ultimately delivered a lively, accessible, and mostly scientifically faithful, albeit cursory, proem to..." Read more

"...His wit shines through." Read more

302 customers mention "History"272 positive30 negative

Customers enjoy the book's history. They find it entertaining and informative, presenting an objective view of our origins with compelling human interest stories. The book provides a sweeping narrative that includes facts, details, and side stories that make each topic feel interesting.

"...everything that you think you know about the universe, broadens the scope of this thought, and increases the breadth and depth of detail by such a..." Read more

"...It is a potted history of science, mostly, which describes how we have studied this planet of ours and some of the astonishing conclusions that can..." Read more

"...Bryson marshals science, history, and philosophy to present a big-picture understanding of our universe from past to present...." Read more

"...did not rise out of a mist; we are on a link of a long and interesting chain of events, and the chain will continue to evolve." Read more

57 customers mention "Length"42 positive15 negative

Customers appreciate the book's length. They find it well-documented with 38 pages of notes and 11 pages of bibliography. The book can be read through or broken up into chapter-sized chunks. It provides a brief and concise overview of various subjects. Some readers mention it's a good audio book for long drives, with humorous analogies that help understand their sheer scale.

"...His frequently humorous analogies help you understand their sheer scale and the havoc left in their wake...." Read more

"...chapters about the size of things in the universe, such as the vastness of space, down to the puzzling subatomic levels, was frequently mind..." Read more

"...It's a long read, but well worth the effort." Read more

"...the background details of the famous scientists, but it got a bit long in the tooth when discussing some of the origins of man and of the universe." Read more

50 customers mention "Visual quality"50 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's vivid illustrations and classy presentation. They find the scope of the book breathtaking, with wonderful illustrations and a thoughtful style. The book is accessible and well-written, providing an insightful look into the lives of humans on this beautiful planet.

"...in a seamless, logical fashion, not always chronological but always illuminating...." Read more

"...The broad picture is certain, even if not all the brushstrokes have been made...." Read more

"...The over-all view is great. Not sure if he covered 'everything' but he sure did come close." Read more

"Bryson's narrative is clear, crisp, and humored as he delves into the major scientific disciplines and their current postulations and problems...." Read more

32 customers mention "Value for money"29 positive3 negative

Customers find the book offers good value for money. They say it's worth the time and money, with a nice price for a social science book. The seller is happy with the book and transaction.

"...paleontology, planetary and cosmological sciences to an impressive degree for a single book...." Read more

"...It's a long read, but well worth the effort." Read more

"...is, to me, worth the price of the book all by itself...." Read more

"Pros Interesting read Teaches you a lot about science Fair price Fast shipping" Read more

58 customers mention "Boredom"20 positive38 negative

Customers have different views on the book's boredom. Some find it engaging and make science seem lively. Others feel it gets tiresome after a while and gets bogged down in the last chapters.

"...Of course, the book is superficial but hey, it is, after all, a short history of EVERYTHING...." Read more

"...us to grasp, to the extent that seems possible, the interrelatedness of all physical phenomona...." Read more

"A frustrating book. It's a history of knowledge written as a gossip column...." Read more

"...find less interesting (chemistry, biology) rather tedious and even boring. The author writes in a style easily understandable to a lay person...." Read more

A Sweep of the Cosmos
4 out of 5 stars
A Sweep of the Cosmos
“Not one of your pertinent ancestors was squashed, devoured, drowned, starved, stranded, stuck fast, untimely wounded, or otherwise deflected from its life’s quest of delivering a tiny charge of genetic material to the right partner at the right moment in order to perpetuate the only possible sequence of hereditary combinations that could result—eventually, astoundingly, and all too briefly—in you.”A Short History of Nearly Everything is not as impossibly far-reaching as the title would indicate. An attempt to cram everything and the kitchen sink into a work intended for the general reader is surely a recipe for failure—or so one might think. Bryson marshals science, history, and philosophy to present a big-picture understanding of our universe from past to present. Extraneous details are filtered out, and mysteries left unexamined, yet it somehow feels complete. Not unlike a film editor who can cut down 24 hours of production material into a feature-length film, he manages to pack a world of wonder and insight into an accessible and entertaining, though relatively lengthy (544-page) tome.Bryson’s preoccupation is less with the rote repetition of facts (though there is that, too) than with conveying just how it is we know what we know. He takes us behind the curtain for a more intimate look at the process of discovery and the strokes of genius essential to that process.Lengthy and mildly scatterbrained it might be, ASHONE is a pure literary delight. The author’s excitement and enthusiasm for the subject matter drip from every page. The sheer joy he receives from learning little gems he missed in high school or being reintroduced to information forgotten long ago is intoxicating. He meets with a wonderful cast of men and women to highlight the personalities behind the stories of discovery. Lone geniuses are a rarity in any field, and science is no exception. Bryson scratches below the surface to meet the individuals who played prominent roles yet went unrecognized.In taking the long view, Bryson engages some of science’s toughest questions. Everything from the Big Bang to man’s (relatively terse) evolutionary past is presented here, with a nod to some of the more eminent and intriguing figures from each field. I particularly appreciated that after a concept was explained, he immediately followed up with the most obvious question in response. It really helps the lay reader navigate these complex topics.Bryson spends a good amount of time on natural disasters, describing the many ways in which they shaped the history of our planet. His frequently humorous analogies help you understand their sheer scale and the havoc left in their wake. Ice ages, earthquakes, supervolcanoes, and pandemics are each showcased in breathtaking detail in some of the most harrowing events on planetary record. Given all the chaos that has besieged our planet, it becomes soberingly clear by the book’s end that we humans—or any life for that matter—are incredibly lucky to be here. In light of all that can go wrong and has gone wrong, it’s remarkable there is any life left to comment on the tragedy and storied disarray. I commend Bryson for demonstrating how truly diminutive our time here on Earth is relative to the universe’s imponderably vast history.Bryson should also be applauded for pointing out places where our inquiry has hit a brick wall or those areas that remain imperfectly understood. The fact that we have accumulated such vast storehouses of knowledge over the last few centuries does not mean there are no mysteries left to explore. Indeed, dozens of questions both big and small remain unanswered, and new discoveries have a tendency to open up several more. We can both be proud about what we have uncovered to date and humble about the many uncharted possibilities that surely await us.Fast and Loose with ScienceThere are a few caveats, however, with respect to some of the finer details. In one place he describes particles with “spin” as actually rotating about an axis (they are not). This erroneous conception of elementary particles dates back to the 1920s, when George Uhlenbeck and Samuel Goudsmit interpreted the motion of electrons as self-rotation around their own axis. A few years later, Paul Dirac pointed out that electrons could not be spinning according to the rules of orbital angular momentum because the rate at which their surface would have to be spinning (to produce the magnitude of the magnetic moment) would have to exceed the speed of light, which would violate the special theory of relativity.In another place Bryson says that quantum entanglement is a violation of relativity (it is not). Relativity tells us that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light, and this applies even to things with zero mass, such as information or other electromagnetic radiation. Entanglement says that measuring a particle in one place can instantly affect a particle somewhere else. However, this effect is constrained by the cosmic speed limit. On p. 42 of his book What Is Relativity?, Jeffrey Bennett responds to this notion:“However, while laboratory experiments suggest that this instantaneous effect can really happen, current understanding of physics tells us that it cannot be used to transmit any useful information from one place to the other; indeed, if you were at the location of the first particle and wanted to confirm that the second had been affected, you’d need to receive a signal from its location, and that signal could not travel faster than light.”Bryson also claims that the production of black holes within particle accelerators like the Large Hadron Collider could destroy the world, when in fact, these microscopic black holes would disintegrate in nanoseconds thanks to Hawking radiation. On p. 154 of the same book, Bennett also debunks this largely media-driven fear:“Some physicists have indeed proposed scenarios in which such micro black holes could be produced in the Large Hadron Collider, but even if they are right, there’s nothing to worry about. The reason is that while the LHC can generate particles from greater concentrations of energy than any other machine that humans have ever built, nature routinely makes such particles. Some of those particles must occasionally rain down on Earth, so if they were dangerous, we would have suffered the consequences long ago."In case you are wondering how a micro black hole could be “safe,” the most likely answer has to do with a process called Hawking radiation…Hawking showed that the laws of quantum physics imply that black holes can gradually “evaporate” in the sense of having their masses decrease, even while nothing ever escapes from within their event horizons. The rate of evaporation depends on a black hole’s mass, with lower-mass black holes evaporating much more rapidly. The result is that while the evaporation rate would be negligible for black holes with star-like masses or greater, micro black holes would evaporate in a fraction of a second, long before they could do any damage.”He may have consulted with experts, but the manuscript could have benefited from additional fact-checking. That said, although the book was published in 2003, there is little that is out of date as of this writing—the confirmed interbreeding between Neanderthals and Denisovans being one notable discovery of late that adds greater texture to the stories recounted here. Additionally, I feel there could (and should) have been a greater emphasis on climate change; Bryson seemed to skirt over it whenever a related topic arose, and it's not clear whether this was intentional.Closing ThoughtsThe content in ASHONE is something I think everyone should know and be exposed to, and it's hard to imagine the material presented with greater alacrity than it is here. The passion and unbridled enthusiasm on display frequently approaches Sagan-esque proportions, in a style redolent of the signature series Cosmos, which is about the highest praise a work in this genre could hope to achieve. Though I found a few errors—and suspect the average grad student in one of a number of the subjects covered could spot a handful more—the book is nevertheless a praiseworthy stab at science writing for the layperson. Bryson set an ambitious task for himself and ultimately delivered a lively, accessible, and mostly scientifically faithful, albeit cursory, proem to the history of the universe as we know it today. “Even now as a species, we are almost preposterously vulnerable in the wild. Nearly every large animal you can care to name is stronger, faster and toothier than us. Faced with attack, modern humans have only two advantages. We have a good brain, with which we can devise strategies, and we have hands with which we can fling or brandish hurtful objects. We are the only creature that can harm at a distance. We can thus afford to be physically vulnerable.” (p. 447)
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2023
    I have spent my life wondering about the natural world around me. In fact, I've made a career from these interests. I know a bit about the cosmos, and I'll have conversations over a beer about elementary quantum mechanics. I'll rant passionately about successional stages of forests and the importance of wilderness conservation.

    I understand time dilation and mycorrhizal relationships between plants, fungi, and animals and the indescribable and excruciating importance of the resiliency it produces on our planets.

    I feel like I can understand the wonder of accretion disk theory in the creation of our early solar system from the nebulae of our own incarnate sun's previous corpse. Sometimes I even think I can understand in a rudimentary way how a runaway chemical reaction could lead to life. To us.

    This book takes everything that you think you know about the universe, broadens the scope of this thought, and increases the breadth and depth of detail by such a factor as to be nearly overwhelming. I particularly enjoy the human aspect that Bill is able to infuse into his narrative. He absolutely enraptures the reader and makes one wonder how we even figured anything out at all.

    Time and time again, as discoveries were made, we see through Bill's detailed research that we are lucky indeed that history played out the way it did. He also raises the thought of what we may have lost along the way. In addition to Bill's historical narrative that he excels at, we are also fortunate that his unique prose serves as a perfect tool for breaking down complex ideas and explaining discoveries and natural science from everything we know (and think we know) into a nearly easily digestible narrative that keeps you hooked, page after page.
    13 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2012
    This book, in common with just about everything Bill Bryson writes, is absolutely wonderful. It is an entertaining romp through, well, just about everything, as the title suggests. It is a potted history of science, mostly, which describes how we have studied this planet of ours and some of the astonishing conclusions that can be drawn from that study. Bryson's prose style is fluid and wickedly funny. To cite just a two examples:
    "Smith's revelation regarding strata heightened the moral awkwardness concerning extinctions. To begin with, it confirmed that God had wiped out creatures not occasionally but repeatedly. This made Him seem not so much careless as peculiarly hostile....God, it appeared, hadn't wished to distract or alarm Moses with news of earlier, irrelevant extinctions."
    "We are each so atomically numerous and so vigorously recycled at death that a significant number of our atoms - up to a billion for each of us, it has been suggested - probably once belonged to Shakespeare. A billion more each came from Buddha and Genghis Khan and Beethoven, and any other historical figure you care to name. (The personages have to be historical, apparently, as it takes the atoms some decades to become thoroughly redistributed; however much you may wish it, you are not yet one with Elvis Presley.)"
    This book is chock-full of homages to famous scientists and many who were less lauded. There are some wild theories (and bad science) discussed, but always illustrated with surprising examples:
    "When you sit in a chair, you are not actually sitting there, but levitating above it at a height of one angstrom (a hundred millionth of a centimetre), your electrons and its electrons implacably opposed to any closer intimacy."
    Placing the human species within the context of the history of our planet, Bryson does end on a sobering note:
    "Most of what has lived on Earth has left behind no record at all....It is a curious fact that on Earth species death is, in the most literal sense, a way of life....99.99 per cent of all species that have ever lived are no longer with us. `To a first approximation,' as David Raup of the University of Chicago likes to say, `all species are extinct.' For complex organisms, the average lifespan of a species is only about four million years - roughly about where we are now."
    A thoroughly enjoyable and stimulating book which does not pretend to be scientific, but is more about scientists and how they have changed the way we look at, and live in, our world.
    4 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2014
    “Not one of your pertinent ancestors was squashed, devoured, drowned, starved, stranded, stuck fast, untimely wounded, or otherwise deflected from its life’s quest of delivering a tiny charge of genetic material to the right partner at the right moment in order to perpetuate the only possible sequence of hereditary combinations that could result—eventually, astoundingly, and all too briefly—in you.”

    A Short History of Nearly Everything is not as impossibly far-reaching as the title would indicate. An attempt to cram everything and the kitchen sink into a work intended for the general reader is surely a recipe for failure—or so one might think. Bryson marshals science, history, and philosophy to present a big-picture understanding of our universe from past to present. Extraneous details are filtered out, and mysteries left unexamined, yet it somehow feels complete. Not unlike a film editor who can cut down 24 hours of production material into a feature-length film, he manages to pack a world of wonder and insight into an accessible and entertaining, though relatively lengthy (544-page) tome.

    Bryson’s preoccupation is less with the rote repetition of facts (though there is that, too) than with conveying just how it is we know what we know. He takes us behind the curtain for a more intimate look at the process of discovery and the strokes of genius essential to that process.

    Lengthy and mildly scatterbrained it might be, ASHONE is a pure literary delight. The author’s excitement and enthusiasm for the subject matter drip from every page. The sheer joy he receives from learning little gems he missed in high school or being reintroduced to information forgotten long ago is intoxicating. He meets with a wonderful cast of men and women to highlight the personalities behind the stories of discovery. Lone geniuses are a rarity in any field, and science is no exception. Bryson scratches below the surface to meet the individuals who played prominent roles yet went unrecognized.

    In taking the long view, Bryson engages some of science’s toughest questions. Everything from the Big Bang to man’s (relatively terse) evolutionary past is presented here, with a nod to some of the more eminent and intriguing figures from each field. I particularly appreciated that after a concept was explained, he immediately followed up with the most obvious question in response. It really helps the lay reader navigate these complex topics.

    Bryson spends a good amount of time on natural disasters, describing the many ways in which they shaped the history of our planet. His frequently humorous analogies help you understand their sheer scale and the havoc left in their wake. Ice ages, earthquakes, supervolcanoes, and pandemics are each showcased in breathtaking detail in some of the most harrowing events on planetary record. Given all the chaos that has besieged our planet, it becomes soberingly clear by the book’s end that we humans—or any life for that matter—are incredibly lucky to be here. In light of all that can go wrong and has gone wrong, it’s remarkable there is any life left to comment on the tragedy and storied disarray. I commend Bryson for demonstrating how truly diminutive our time here on Earth is relative to the universe’s imponderably vast history.

    Bryson should also be applauded for pointing out places where our inquiry has hit a brick wall or those areas that remain imperfectly understood. The fact that we have accumulated such vast storehouses of knowledge over the last few centuries does not mean there are no mysteries left to explore. Indeed, dozens of questions both big and small remain unanswered, and new discoveries have a tendency to open up several more. We can both be proud about what we have uncovered to date and humble about the many uncharted possibilities that surely await us.

    Fast and Loose with Science

    There are a few caveats, however, with respect to some of the finer details. In one place he describes particles with “spin” as actually rotating about an axis (they are not). This erroneous conception of elementary particles dates back to the 1920s, when George Uhlenbeck and Samuel Goudsmit interpreted the motion of electrons as self-rotation around their own axis. A few years later, Paul Dirac pointed out that electrons could not be spinning according to the rules of orbital angular momentum because the rate at which their surface would have to be spinning (to produce the magnitude of the magnetic moment) would have to exceed the speed of light, which would violate the special theory of relativity.

    In another place Bryson says that quantum entanglement is a violation of relativity (it is not). Relativity tells us that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light, and this applies even to things with zero mass, such as information or other electromagnetic radiation. Entanglement says that measuring a particle in one place can instantly affect a particle somewhere else. However, this effect is constrained by the cosmic speed limit. On p. 42 of his book What Is Relativity?, Jeffrey Bennett responds to this notion:

    “However, while laboratory experiments suggest that this instantaneous effect can really happen, current understanding of physics tells us that it cannot be used to transmit any useful information from one place to the other; indeed, if you were at the location of the first particle and wanted to confirm that the second had been affected, you’d need to receive a signal from its location, and that signal could not travel faster than light.”

    Bryson also claims that the production of black holes within particle accelerators like the Large Hadron Collider could destroy the world, when in fact, these microscopic black holes would disintegrate in nanoseconds thanks to Hawking radiation. On p. 154 of the same book, Bennett also debunks this largely media-driven fear:

    “Some physicists have indeed proposed scenarios in which such micro black holes could be produced in the Large Hadron Collider, but even if they are right, there’s nothing to worry about. The reason is that while the LHC can generate particles from greater concentrations of energy than any other machine that humans have ever built, nature routinely makes such particles. Some of those particles must occasionally rain down on Earth, so if they were dangerous, we would have suffered the consequences long ago.

    "In case you are wondering how a micro black hole could be “safe,” the most likely answer has to do with a process called Hawking radiation…Hawking showed that the laws of quantum physics imply that black holes can gradually “evaporate” in the sense of having their masses decrease, even while nothing ever escapes from within their event horizons. The rate of evaporation depends on a black hole’s mass, with lower-mass black holes evaporating much more rapidly. The result is that while the evaporation rate would be negligible for black holes with star-like masses or greater, micro black holes would evaporate in a fraction of a second, long before they could do any damage.”

    He may have consulted with experts, but the manuscript could have benefited from additional fact-checking. That said, although the book was published in 2003, there is little that is out of date as of this writing—the confirmed interbreeding between Neanderthals and Denisovans being one notable discovery of late that adds greater texture to the stories recounted here. Additionally, I feel there could (and should) have been a greater emphasis on climate change; Bryson seemed to skirt over it whenever a related topic arose, and it's not clear whether this was intentional.

    Closing Thoughts

    The content in ASHONE is something I think everyone should know and be exposed to, and it's hard to imagine the material presented with greater alacrity than it is here. The passion and unbridled enthusiasm on display frequently approaches Sagan-esque proportions, in a style redolent of the signature series Cosmos, which is about the highest praise a work in this genre could hope to achieve. Though I found a few errors—and suspect the average grad student in one of a number of the subjects covered could spot a handful more—the book is nevertheless a praiseworthy stab at science writing for the layperson. Bryson set an ambitious task for himself and ultimately delivered a lively, accessible, and mostly scientifically faithful, albeit cursory, proem to the history of the universe as we know it today.

    “Even now as a species, we are almost preposterously vulnerable in the wild. Nearly every large animal you can care to name is stronger, faster and toothier than us. Faced with attack, modern humans have only two advantages. We have a good brain, with which we can devise strategies, and we have hands with which we can fling or brandish hurtful objects. We are the only creature that can harm at a distance. We can thus afford to be physically vulnerable.” (p. 447)
    Customer image
    4.0 out of 5 stars A Sweep of the Cosmos
    Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2014
    “Not one of your pertinent ancestors was squashed, devoured, drowned, starved, stranded, stuck fast, untimely wounded, or otherwise deflected from its life’s quest of delivering a tiny charge of genetic material to the right partner at the right moment in order to perpetuate the only possible sequence of hereditary combinations that could result—eventually, astoundingly, and all too briefly—in you.”

    A Short History of Nearly Everything is not as impossibly far-reaching as the title would indicate. An attempt to cram everything and the kitchen sink into a work intended for the general reader is surely a recipe for failure—or so one might think. Bryson marshals science, history, and philosophy to present a big-picture understanding of our universe from past to present. Extraneous details are filtered out, and mysteries left unexamined, yet it somehow feels complete. Not unlike a film editor who can cut down 24 hours of production material into a feature-length film, he manages to pack a world of wonder and insight into an accessible and entertaining, though relatively lengthy (544-page) tome.

    Bryson’s preoccupation is less with the rote repetition of facts (though there is that, too) than with conveying just how it is we know what we know. He takes us behind the curtain for a more intimate look at the process of discovery and the strokes of genius essential to that process.

    Lengthy and mildly scatterbrained it might be, ASHONE is a pure literary delight. The author’s excitement and enthusiasm for the subject matter drip from every page. The sheer joy he receives from learning little gems he missed in high school or being reintroduced to information forgotten long ago is intoxicating. He meets with a wonderful cast of men and women to highlight the personalities behind the stories of discovery. Lone geniuses are a rarity in any field, and science is no exception. Bryson scratches below the surface to meet the individuals who played prominent roles yet went unrecognized.

    In taking the long view, Bryson engages some of science’s toughest questions. Everything from the Big Bang to man’s (relatively terse) evolutionary past is presented here, with a nod to some of the more eminent and intriguing figures from each field. I particularly appreciated that after a concept was explained, he immediately followed up with the most obvious question in response. It really helps the lay reader navigate these complex topics.

    Bryson spends a good amount of time on natural disasters, describing the many ways in which they shaped the history of our planet. His frequently humorous analogies help you understand their sheer scale and the havoc left in their wake. Ice ages, earthquakes, supervolcanoes, and pandemics are each showcased in breathtaking detail in some of the most harrowing events on planetary record. Given all the chaos that has besieged our planet, it becomes soberingly clear by the book’s end that we humans—or any life for that matter—are incredibly lucky to be here. In light of all that can go wrong and has gone wrong, it’s remarkable there is any life left to comment on the tragedy and storied disarray. I commend Bryson for demonstrating how truly diminutive our time here on Earth is relative to the universe’s imponderably vast history.

    Bryson should also be applauded for pointing out places where our inquiry has hit a brick wall or those areas that remain imperfectly understood. The fact that we have accumulated such vast storehouses of knowledge over the last few centuries does not mean there are no mysteries left to explore. Indeed, dozens of questions both big and small remain unanswered, and new discoveries have a tendency to open up several more. We can both be proud about what we have uncovered to date and humble about the many uncharted possibilities that surely await us.

    Fast and Loose with Science

    There are a few caveats, however, with respect to some of the finer details. In one place he describes particles with “spin” as actually rotating about an axis (they are not). This erroneous conception of elementary particles dates back to the 1920s, when George Uhlenbeck and Samuel Goudsmit interpreted the motion of electrons as self-rotation around their own axis. A few years later, Paul Dirac pointed out that electrons could not be spinning according to the rules of orbital angular momentum because the rate at which their surface would have to be spinning (to produce the magnitude of the magnetic moment) would have to exceed the speed of light, which would violate the special theory of relativity.

    In another place Bryson says that quantum entanglement is a violation of relativity (it is not). Relativity tells us that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light, and this applies even to things with zero mass, such as information or other electromagnetic radiation. Entanglement says that measuring a particle in one place can instantly affect a particle somewhere else. However, this effect is constrained by the cosmic speed limit. On p. 42 of his book What Is Relativity?, Jeffrey Bennett responds to this notion:

    “However, while laboratory experiments suggest that this instantaneous effect can really happen, current understanding of physics tells us that it cannot be used to transmit any useful information from one place to the other; indeed, if you were at the location of the first particle and wanted to confirm that the second had been affected, you’d need to receive a signal from its location, and that signal could not travel faster than light.”

    Bryson also claims that the production of black holes within particle accelerators like the Large Hadron Collider could destroy the world, when in fact, these microscopic black holes would disintegrate in nanoseconds thanks to Hawking radiation. On p. 154 of the same book, Bennett also debunks this largely media-driven fear:

    “Some physicists have indeed proposed scenarios in which such micro black holes could be produced in the Large Hadron Collider, but even if they are right, there’s nothing to worry about. The reason is that while the LHC can generate particles from greater concentrations of energy than any other machine that humans have ever built, nature routinely makes such particles. Some of those particles must occasionally rain down on Earth, so if they were dangerous, we would have suffered the consequences long ago.

    "In case you are wondering how a micro black hole could be “safe,” the most likely answer has to do with a process called Hawking radiation…Hawking showed that the laws of quantum physics imply that black holes can gradually “evaporate” in the sense of having their masses decrease, even while nothing ever escapes from within their event horizons. The rate of evaporation depends on a black hole’s mass, with lower-mass black holes evaporating much more rapidly. The result is that while the evaporation rate would be negligible for black holes with star-like masses or greater, micro black holes would evaporate in a fraction of a second, long before they could do any damage.”

    He may have consulted with experts, but the manuscript could have benefited from additional fact-checking. That said, although the book was published in 2003, there is little that is out of date as of this writing—the confirmed interbreeding between Neanderthals and Denisovans being one notable discovery of late that adds greater texture to the stories recounted here. Additionally, I feel there could (and should) have been a greater emphasis on climate change; Bryson seemed to skirt over it whenever a related topic arose, and it's not clear whether this was intentional.

    Closing Thoughts

    The content in ASHONE is something I think everyone should know and be exposed to, and it's hard to imagine the material presented with greater alacrity than it is here. The passion and unbridled enthusiasm on display frequently approaches Sagan-esque proportions, in a style redolent of the signature series Cosmos, which is about the highest praise a work in this genre could hope to achieve. Though I found a few errors—and suspect the average grad student in one of a number of the subjects covered could spot a handful more—the book is nevertheless a praiseworthy stab at science writing for the layperson. Bryson set an ambitious task for himself and ultimately delivered a lively, accessible, and mostly scientifically faithful, albeit cursory, proem to the history of the universe as we know it today.

    “Even now as a species, we are almost preposterously vulnerable in the wild. Nearly every large animal you can care to name is stronger, faster and toothier than us. Faced with attack, modern humans have only two advantages. We have a good brain, with which we can devise strategies, and we have hands with which we can fling or brandish hurtful objects. We are the only creature that can harm at a distance. We can thus afford to be physically vulnerable.” (p. 447)
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  • Kindle Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
    Reviewed in Brazil on November 30, 2024
    Amazing book! If you like science or history you will love it.

    It's inexplicable the facility that Bill have explaining complex constructions using simple analogies. Certainly he is my preferred author.
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Worth every hour of reading.
    Reviewed in Canada on September 16, 2024
    This was my second time reading this book which I first read several years ago, and it was still entirely engrossing and every minute revealed fascinating information told in such a clear and easy way to read. The amount of research that must have been done to put all this information together is astonishing, and this is a book you could read many times because not only is it so interesting, but it is probably impossible to retain all the information contained, making multiple readings fresh every time. Highly recommended for anyone that has any interest in anything.
  • Hilda
    5.0 out of 5 stars Muy interesante
    Reviewed in Mexico on July 11, 2022
    Vale la pena la lectura
  • Ina Susanna dagis
    5.0 out of 5 stars Bokköp
    Reviewed in Sweden on July 18, 2024
    Snabb leverans av bok jag önskade. Inte läst ut än, men intressant och rolig än så länge
  • Fixed price
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Masterful Journey Through the Cosmos: "A Nearly Short History of Everything
    Reviewed in India on March 20, 2024
    Billy Bryson's "A Nearly Short History of Everything" is an extraordinary voyage through time, space, and the wonders of the universe. From the smallest particles to the vast expanse of galaxies, Bryson's narrative captivates readers with its blend of wit, insight, and boundless curiosity.

    With meticulous research and engaging prose, Bryson effortlessly distills complex scientific concepts into accessible and entertaining anecdotes. Whether unraveling the mysteries of quantum mechanics or pondering the origins of life itself, Bryson's storytelling prowess shines brightly, making even the most esoteric subjects engaging and relatable.

    What sets "A Nearly Short History of Everything" apart is Bryson's ability to seamlessly weave together science, history, and human experience. By tracing the interconnectedness of seemingly disparate phenomena, Bryson unveils the grand tapestry of existence in all its splendor and complexity.

    Moreover, Bryson's infectious enthusiasm for discovery is palpable on every page, inviting readers to share in the awe and wonder of the cosmos. Whether you're a seasoned scientist or a curious layperson, this book offers something for everyone, enriching the mind and stirring the imagination.

    In conclusion, "A Nearly Short History of Everything" is a tour de force of scientific storytelling, deserving of every accolade it receives. Bryson's genius lies not only in his mastery of the subject matter but also in his ability to inspire wonder and curiosity in readers of all ages. Simply put, this book is a must-read for anyone seeking to explore the wonders of the universe. Anyways it's a good book 👍.
    Customer image
    Fixed price
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Masterful Journey Through the Cosmos: "A Nearly Short History of Everything
    Reviewed in India on March 20, 2024
    Billy Bryson's "A Nearly Short History of Everything" is an extraordinary voyage through time, space, and the wonders of the universe. From the smallest particles to the vast expanse of galaxies, Bryson's narrative captivates readers with its blend of wit, insight, and boundless curiosity.

    With meticulous research and engaging prose, Bryson effortlessly distills complex scientific concepts into accessible and entertaining anecdotes. Whether unraveling the mysteries of quantum mechanics or pondering the origins of life itself, Bryson's storytelling prowess shines brightly, making even the most esoteric subjects engaging and relatable.

    What sets "A Nearly Short History of Everything" apart is Bryson's ability to seamlessly weave together science, history, and human experience. By tracing the interconnectedness of seemingly disparate phenomena, Bryson unveils the grand tapestry of existence in all its splendor and complexity.

    Moreover, Bryson's infectious enthusiasm for discovery is palpable on every page, inviting readers to share in the awe and wonder of the cosmos. Whether you're a seasoned scientist or a curious layperson, this book offers something for everyone, enriching the mind and stirring the imagination.

    In conclusion, "A Nearly Short History of Everything" is a tour de force of scientific storytelling, deserving of every accolade it receives. Bryson's genius lies not only in his mastery of the subject matter but also in his ability to inspire wonder and curiosity in readers of all ages. Simply put, this book is a must-read for anyone seeking to explore the wonders of the universe. Anyways it's a good book 👍.
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