From Publishers Weekly
Over his several decades of writing, Gardner has accomplished so much it's hard to believe there's just one of him. His 60-odd books have explained complex science and math, dissected UFOs and pseudoscience, analyzed and admired Alice in Wonderland, answered everyday questions about technology and collected 25 years of contributions to Scientific American's column "Mathematical Games." This compilation of previously published work adds postscripts and restores editorial cuts to 29 short essays and book reviews, reprinted from Skeptical Inquirer, Free Inquiry, Discover, the Los Angeles Times Book Review and elsewhere. Many pieces attack religious fundamentalists and claims of the supernatural, like the purported "psychic surgeons" from the Philippines. A three-part series examines the Seventh-Day Adventists and their breakaway sects, who set dates, since expired, for the apocalypse (the first Christians apparently did the same). Also in Gardner's sights are TV evangelists, Buckley's brand of Christianity and social constructionist theories of science and math. Readers who share Gardner's sentiments on all these matters may find his debunking essays repetitive, but they will turn with gratitude to his appreciations. The best of the essays and book reviews here are praiseAfor unjustly forgotten children's author and editor John Martin, for L. Frank Baum of Oz fame, for science-fiction editor and popular-science writer Hugo Gernsback, for H.G. Wells and for sharp-tongued Catholic novelist G.K. Chesterton, whose work Gardner knows inside and out. It is in these pieces that Gardner's readers will learnAas they may expect from him something new each time. (Oct.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Scientific American
Once again the reader gets to see what a broad range of things Gardner thinks about and how crisply he writes. Already renowned as a mathematical gamesman and a steely critic of pseudoscience, Gardner extends his reach in this collection of nine essays and 20 book reviews. In "The Wandering Jew and the Second Coming," he touches on a biblical message that is, he says, "for Bible fundamentalists one of the most troublesome of all New Testament passages." Reviewing Demon-Haunted World, in which astronomer Carl Sagan attacked the "dumbing down" of science, Gardner calls the book "a powerful indictment of today's miserable science teaching, the upsurge of Protestant fundamentalism and the roles of greedy book publishers, abetted by the print and electronic media, in accelerating America's dumbing down." He also considers a "question that troubles all the parents of chess prodigies," namely, what direction the prodigy will take. "Will he become an honored grandmaster, happy and well adjusted as the Russian Boris Spassky, or will the game turn him into a miserable misfit like Bobby Fischer?"
EDITORS OF SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN