We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Find out more

Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $13.50

Format:
Paperback
184 pp.
numerous halftones and line drawings, 111 mm x 174 mm

ISBN-13:
9780192854308

Publication date:
December 2003

Imprint: OUP UK


Molecules: A Very Short Introduction

Philip Ball

Series : Very Short Introductions

The processes in a single living cell are akin to that of a city teeming with molecular inhabitants that move, communicate, cooperate, and compete. In this Very Short Introduction, Philip Ball explores the role of the molecule in and around us - how, for example, a single fertilized egg can grow into a multi-celled Mozart, what makes spider's silk insoluble in the morning dew, and how this molecular dynamism is being captured in the laboratory, promising to reinvent chemistry as the central creative science of the century.

Readership : General readers interested in popular science; students of chemistry and biochemistry at school and college level; professional scientists working in chemistry (including industry), biochemistry, pharmacology, materials science, and IT; science teachers.

Reviews

  • `Review from previous edition If the intimate workings of molecules seem invisible, through Philip Ball's lively pros we see them--coming to life, helping us live. A special delight of this excellent book is the tie that emerges between the wondrous molecules of nature and those chemists make in the laboratory.'
    Ronald Hoffmann, Chemistry Nobel Laureate 1981
  • `Almost no aspect of the exciting advances in molecular research studies at the beginning of the 21st Century has been left untouched and in so doing, Ball has presented an imaginative, personal overview, which is as instructive as it is enjoyable to read.'
    Harry Kroto, Chemistry Nobel Laureate 1996
  • `At no point does Stories of the Invisible sacrifice sound science for sound bites - we are in the hands of a scholar and true believer.'
    John Emsley Nature 20/08/2001
  • `This is a very readable and non-technical survey . . . All of the ingredients of a good work of ficiton are here. It really is a good bedtime read for all.'
    THES 04/01/2002
  • `Stories of the Invisible is a lucid account of the way that chemists see the molecular world . . . the text is enriched with many historical and literature references, and is accessible to the reader untrained in chemistry'
    THES, 04/01/2002

1. Engineers of the Invisible: Making molecules
2. Vital Signs: The molecules of life
3. Take the Strain: Materials from molecules
4. The Burning Issue: Molecules and energy
5. Good Little Movers: Molecular motors
6. Delivering the Message: Molecular communication
7. The Chemical Computer: Molecular informatoin
Notes and Further Reading

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Philip Ball is a science writer and a consultant editor for Nature, where he was formerly an editor for physical science for over 10 years. He writes about all areas of science for the international press, and has broadcast on TV and radio. His previous books include Designing the Molecular World, The Self-Made Tapestry, H20: A Biography of Water and The Ingredients: A Guided Tour of the Elements . He holds a degree in chemistry from Oxford University and a doctorate in physics from Bristol University. He lives in London, where his Homunculus Theatre Company occasionally performs on a shoestring budget.

There are no related titles available at this time.

Special Features

  • Popular science writing at its very best
  • Takes newcomers to the subject all the way up to current research in new areas of chemistry
  • A non-traditional approach to chemistry, focusing on what chemistry might become during this century, rather than a survey of its past
  • Concentrates on molecules in living systems, and on how synthetic chemistry often takes its inspiration from organic molecules