Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Alan Burdick

    Alan Burdick is an editor on the science desk of The New York Times. His work frequently delves into the intricate details of scientific concepts and their profound impact on the human experience. Burdick excels at translating complex scientific ideas into accessible and engaging narratives. His writing style is both informative and captivating, inviting readers to explore the wonders of science with curiosity and depth.

    Po co człowiekowi czas
    Waarom tijd vliegt
    Warum die Zeit verfliegt
    Out of Eden
    Why Time Flies
    • 2017

      Why Time Flies

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      • A witty, surprising, often moving and always insightful work of scientific writing that will ensure you never look at a clock the same way again • Combining philosophy, investigative journalism, cultural critique and personal memoir, Why Times Flies is a powerful attempt to reckon with a deceptively simple question: ‘What is time?’ • Framed by his own shifting experience of time following the birth of his twin sons, Burdick's work also draws on bright minds from philosophy, religion, neurobiology, psychology and other fields, both ancient and modern, to comprehend mankind’s curious relationship with time • Burdick visits ancient historical sites, cutting edge scientific laboratories and even the Arctic Circle to investigate concepts such as jet lag, time management, internal clocks and that creeping sense that time seems to speed up as we age • Accessible and highly readable, Why Time Flies will appeal to fans of Norman Doidge, Jon Ronson, Malcolm Gladwell and Daniel Pink • Alan Burdick is a National Book Award finalist and science staff writer at the New Yorker

      Why Time Flies
    • 2006

      Out of Eden

      An Odyssey of Ecological Invasion

      • 354 pages
      • 13 hours of reading
      3.9(47)Add rating

      The book explores the alarming phenomenon of invasive species as they spread globally due to human activities. It highlights various examples, such as bird-eating snakes in Hawaii and zebra mussels in U.S. waters, illustrating the disruption these organisms cause to native ecosystems. The narrative emphasizes the growing concern among biologists regarding the "homogenization of the world," suggesting that the greatest threat to biodiversity may stem from the natural movement of species rather than traditional environmental destruction.

      Out of Eden