cover image Zoom: How Everything Moves, from Atoms and Galaxies to Blizzards and Bees

Zoom: How Everything Moves, from Atoms and Galaxies to Blizzards and Bees

Bob Berman. Little, Brown, $27 (336p) ISBN 978-0-316-21740-8

Veteran astronomy columnist Berman (Strange Universe) traverses the world as well as the archives to assemble a cheerful collection of popular science essays connected by their relation to movement. Whether it is the expansion of the universe or the growth of a fingernail, he explores significant truths like the fact that scientists are still baffled by what constitutes dark matter and dark energy—which make up most of our universe’s mass-energy—while providing ammunition for trivial pursuits (the speed of the fastest human: 23 mph), myth-busting (water does not swirl in opposite directions north and south of the equator), and weird lists (animals killed by meteors). The book presents a vast amount of stimulating material in breezy, accessible prose that even precocious adolescents can understand. Berman belongs to the school of writers who feel that education must be leavened by humor, best for readers who can appreciate this approach. (July)