A lucid and humorous layman’s guide to quantum mechanics, a theory that has been proven accurate despite its exceeding weirdness.
From the celebrity of the Higgs boson to reports of quantum computing, many people are vaguely familiar with quantum and particle physics and its strange implications, but few (if any) truly understand it. James, a science teacher and blogger, clearly has experience in explaining complicated ideas in understandable terms, and he capably applies his skills to this tricky subject, which he describes as “a realm of craziness and chaos where knowledge and imagination become the same thing.” The author tells the familiar yet interesting stories of scientific heavyweights such as Einstein, Bohr, Heisenberg, Schrödinger, and Feynman (“he had red carpets laid out for him at weekly lectures and spent his free time hanging out in topless bars, doing calculations on napkins and drawing sketches of the dancers and sometimes the men watching”), and he details a history of experiments designed to verify theories that, on the surface, seem impossible. James also unpacks quantum field theory, an idea so dense that most writers don’t dare broach it. He includes hand-drawn illustrations and is mostly successful in using plain language to convey not just quantum theories, but why they deservedly generate such excitement—or, seemingly just as often, frustration—among scientists. Throughout each clearly defined chapter, the author uses pop-culture analogies to great effect and laces his nuanced science writing with genuinely funny asides (see: “quantum pants”). He also includes several appendices with additional context and simple exercises inspired by science communicators such as Carl Sagan. James writes with infectious enthusiasm and optimism, concluding that, “rather than science drawing to a denouement, it appears that things are just getting started and that is a good reason to get excited.”
Even first-time physics readers will come away with a working knowledge of one of the universe’s most enigmatic subjects.