"The Matchbox that Ate a Forty-ton Truck," by Marcus Chown, partakes more heavily of simile than of prestidigitation, especially in Part One on atoms. The book is a charming view of what common observations of the world around us tells or implies about the realities of physics. However, as one might expect from a volume that purports to explain particle physics, solar physics and the Big Bang theory in 216 pages, a lot is left out of the story.
I felt a little overwhelmed by the sheer number of descriptive illustrations in Part One. At times I was more caught up in the visualization of these than I was in discovering the underlying principle the author was discussing by their use. If nothing else, the experience made it much clearer to me why professional physicists prefer to think and communicate in formulae rather than in words; at some point in time word descriptions simply become too ponderous.
The remaining two parts were very clever. Part Two presents the research on the creation of the elements, carrying the reader through the thinking process that ultimately brought understanding, not only of chemical origins, but of solar anatomy and physiology. Part Three discusses the development of the Big Bang theory and some of the issues that have arisen because of it--the need for a theory of quantum gravity being one of them.
My favorite part of the entire book is the last chapter, "Earth's Full, Go Home." Here the author presents the range of speculation about intelligent life in the universe and why, putative UFOs aside, we have yet to have incontrovertible evidence of extraterrestrial life. Some of the more recent suggestions are quite interesting. I'm just not sure of how much they--or in fact of any of the earlier theories--are just reflections of where we are as a species ourselves. It's also amazing to me that we care; we do have tremendous issues on our own planet with which to deal, and the existence or nonexistence of aliens seems paltry by comparison.
All in all, the book is a good introduction to how physics is done. The questions that every day phenomenon present to an inquiring mind and the ways that such minds approach their solution is clearly demonstrated by the book. The fact that science is a collaborative effort is revealed by the history of the research and the "tweaking" of various theories. It becomes evident through the narrative, too, that sometimes turning things upside down can produce sensational results.