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Life Itself: Exploring the Realm of the Living Cell [Hardcover]

Boyce Rensberger (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 6, 1997 0195108744 978-0195108743
Hidden in a nondescript red-brick building in Rockville, Maryland, is the most unusual warehouse in the world, a bank of living cells called the American Type Culture Collection. Here, at 321 degrees below zero--a temperature at which life abandons its vital dance and enters limbo, but without dying--are some 30,000 vials holding 60 billion living forms in suspended animation, including mouse kidney cells, turkey blood cells, armadillo spleen cells, and some 40 billion human cells. These cultured cells are essential to modern biological research--in fact, cells today are the most intimately studied life forms in all of science, for both practical and philosophical reasons. For one, all disease--from cancer and the common cold, to arthritis and AIDS--stems from cells gone awry. And cell research not only promises a cure for a wide variety of disease--it also holds the key to the mystery of life itself.
In Life Itself, Boyce Rensberger, science writer for The Washington Post, takes readers to the frontlines of cell research with some of the brightest investigators in molecular, cellular, and developmental biology. Virtually all the hottest topics in biomedical research are covered here, such as how do cells and their minute components move? How do the body's cells heal wounds? What is cancer? Why do cells die? And what is the nature of life? Readers discover that--contrary to what we may have concluded from pictures in our high school textbooks--cells teem with activity and that, inside, they "are more crowded with components than the inside of a computer." We learn that scientists now know of at least ten molecular motors that move things about inside the cell--in most cells, this motion is short because the cell is tiny, but in the single-celled nerve fibers that run from the base of the spinal cord to the toes (measuring three or four feet in an adult human), molecular motors can take several days to make the trip. Rensberger describes the many fascinating kinds of cells found in the body, from "neural crest cells" (early in embryonic development, these cells crawl all over the embryo to the sites where they will pursue their fate--as nerve cells, or cartilage, or skin), to "dust cells" (nomadic cells in the lung that swallow and store indigestible particles, then migrate to the gullet where they themselves are swallowed and digested), to "natural killer cells" (millions of which roam the body looking for cancerous cells). We meet many of the scientists who have pioneered cell research, such as Rita Levi-Montalcini--an Italian who, shut out of her lab during World War II, continued to experiment in her bedroom at home, making the discovery ("nerve growth factor") for which she won the Nobel Prize--and American Leonard Hayflick, who proved that all human cells (except cancer cells) invariably die after about fifty divisions. Rensberger also provides an illuminating discussion of AIDS--revealing exactly why this virus is so difficult to defeat--and of cancer, explaining that before cancer can start, a whole series of rare events must occur, events so unlikely that it seems a wonder that anyone gets cancer at all.
The solutions to the most pressing challenges facing scientists today--from the efforts to conquer disease to the quest to understand life itself--will be found in the innermost workings of the cell. In Life Itself, Boyce Rensberger paints a colorful and fascinating portrait of modern research in this vital area, an account which will enthrall anyone interested in state-of-the-art science or the incredible workings of the human body.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Life Itself is a wonderfully readable digest of everything currently known about the mechanisms by which living cells perform their myriad tasks."--The New York Times Book Review

"This book is a great education in the powers of ordinary language, poetically arranged to explain, to inspire, and to heighten curiosity in non-scientists and scientists alike."--Washington Post

"Rensberger has the two essential qualities of a first-rate science journalist: he grasps what is important, and he presents it in a clear, entertaining manner. [ ife Itself] is an exemplary introduction to a part of science, cell biology, that is of crucial importance to everyone but still understood by extremely few." Edward O. Wilson, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University

"Good science journalism is rare. Excellent scientific journalism should be celebrated. This book is cause for celebration!" Annals of RCPSC (vol.30,no.7,Oct 1997)

About the Author


About the Author:
Boyce Rensberger is Science Writer for The Washington Post, and creator of The Post's acclaimed educational supplement, "Horizon: The Learning Section."

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (March 6, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195108744
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195108743
  • Product Dimensions: 9.7 x 6.7 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,089,524 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Boyce Rensberger has been a science writer or science editor for more than 32 years, beginning in 1966 at The Detroit Free Press. From there he went to The New York Times from 1971 through 1979. He left The Times to freelance and to become head writer of a PBS science series for children, "3-2-1- Contact!" In 1981, he became senior editor of Science 81-Science 84 magazine, a popular monthly published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science. At the end of 1984 Rensberger went to The Washington Post, where he served as science writer and science editor. At The Post, he created the paper's acclaimed monthly supplement, "Horizon: The Learning Section." Rensberger has written four science books, most recently Life Itself: Exploring the Realm of the Living Cell.

From 1998 to 2008 Rensberger was director of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowships at M.I.T. This is a program that brings a dozen professional journalists to MIT and Harvard to take courses for one academic year. He also established a series of "boot camps" on various subjects, bringing additional journalists to campus for shorter workshops.

Rensberger has twice won the AAAS top award for science writing. In 1973-74 he was an Alicia Patterson Fellow, spending a year in East Africa studying human evolution and wildlife conservation. In 1987 he was a Science Writing Fellow at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass.

Rensberger, who received a B.S. in zoology and journalism from the University of Miami and an M.S. in mental health communications from Syracuse University, also was co-director of the summer Science Writing Fellowships Program at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole. His outside interests include gardening and woodworking. He lives in rural Maryland with his wife.

 

Customer Reviews

20 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Who Is In Charge Here?, May 24, 2000
By 
For most of us the cells that make up our bodies are as well known as aliens from another galaxy. I took college biology back in an era that seemed not far distant from when Leeuwenhoek developed the microscope. In that time cells seemed to be blobish creatures that led mysterious, ill-defined lives. Boyce Rensberger brings us a fascinating, up to date, tale of who these little people are. I say "little people", because in the telling of it you can't but wonder if these smallest parts of biological existence don't lead an almost sentient life. I found myself developing a personal theory that millions of years ago a group of cells got together and decided to build some big creatures that would go out and hunt food for them. They are in charge, not us.

Our cells have ports in their membranes that require a special key to get in. If a morsel of cell food (glucose) arrives in a little boxcar (vesicle) it must have a key that fits in the membrane receptor. Vesicles travel around the cell cytoplasm on microtubules, which are like so many train tracks. A seven step process takes place that changes the glucose to pyruvate which is then shipped to little organelles called mitochrondia which change this substance to ATP which is the universal cell food. The marvelous thing is that things are moved, and acted on by various protein molecules. How do little things like molecules dash about carrying out various assignments? In another part of the book the author describes the replication of the chromosomes. Not only do molecules carry out this assignment, but another molecule checks the finished work for accuracy. Throughout the book I kept saying over and over, "but how can these molecules actually do this?" How do cilia and sperm cells wag? Essentially a protein molecule holds on to a stiff fiber, reaches over to another fiber and bends it towards the first fiber. Incredible.

I'm just a layman, but this is one of the most exciting science books that I have ever read. Mr. Rensberger makes it very accessible by providing diagrams, and by using extremely useful analogies to help you understand a most complex life form. I've also taken a college course in human physiology, but these little microscopic life forms seem much more fascinating and complex than the operation of the human body itself.

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrific, October 23, 1999
By A Customer
This is one of the very best biology books I've ever read, in a league with Dawkins. Beautifully clear explanations. Makes things concrete and visualizable. Good quotes and interesting historical perspectives. Just technical enough that you are getting the real stuff not some dumbed-down substitute but minus detail of interest only to people going into the field(s). You actually get a perspective on the topic you *don't* get from the textbooks (the publishers should make the textbook writers study how this guy does it). The first Amazon reviewer complained about the ageing chapter -- yeah, it wasn't that strong on evolution of ageing, but overall this is still a better book than Austad's book on ageing and vastly more engaging than Rose (if you're looking for biology of ageing, Halliday is better than either in my opinion).

I have only one serious complaint here: I would have liked ten times as many illustrations and some in color but I'm sure that would have raised the price a lot.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent book for the general reader, June 16, 2000
After reading another reviewer's complaints about the author's treatment of the biology of aging, I went back and reread that section. I think I have become so accustomed to "reading around" such wording in evolutionary writing that I didn't even notice it until I looked for it. Sure enough, the author does sound as if he is making group selection arguments, but I don't think that is what he means. I think he is just being a bit sloppy with his language. If the Hayflick limit offers no insights into organismal aging, as the earlier reviewer claims, it nonetheless is a curious observation that average species lifespan correlates closely with the allowable number of cell divisions for the species. As a non-biologist scientist, I found the book a fascinating update to my highschool biology course (ancient history).While it gives a clear explication of the workings of the cell, it is written engagingly and simply enough that I am having my middle school children read it as an introduction to biology before they take it in high school. A book this size and at the level it is written obviously can't do justice to the full depth and breadth of cellular biology and biochemistry, but it does provide a sound introduction and certainly whets the appetite of the scientifically inclined.
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First Sentence:
Clouds of cold fog billow up through a circular hatch in the top of a stainless steel tank as Rob Hay pulls out the lid and its one-foot thickness of styrofoam insulation. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
motor molecules, true embryo, actin meshwork, kinesin molecule, autonomous motion, hemoglobin gene, two centrioles, cell biologists, spindle fibers, inner cell mass, embryonic disc
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, University of California, Woods Hole, Jacques Loeb, Henrietta Lacks, Marine Biological Laboratory, San Francisco, American Type Culture Collection, Jacques Monod, National Institutes of Health, Third World
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