From Scientific American
Jones, who has turned out the weekly "Daedalus" column in British publications since 1964, sees himself as "the court jester in the Palace of Science." Each of his columns proposes some scientific scheme designed to confront accepted notions of technical feasibility. Appearing in New Scientist from 1964 to 1988, in Nature and the Guardian until 1996, and in Nature alone since then, the columns now number more than 1,700. From them, Jones has chosen 101, revised them, added comments, and drawn pictures or diagrams to accompany most of them. He says the columns aim at "a region of scientific humour whose appeal lay in its closeness to reality." And so he goes on about such topics as the solid-liquid diet, a dance to the music of space-time, and herbal petrol. The columns will evoke plenty of chuckles from the reader while dispensing plenty of sound scientific information.
EDITORS OF SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
Review
'In each article, following a time-hallowed formula, he takes some scientific quirk and fashions from it an invention which, although delightfully cuckoo, leaves th reader with the nagging feeling that it might just work...I think this book should be compulsory reading for research directors. They would certainly get their money's worth, for no fewer than 148 inventions are described. But on no account should they, or you, attempt to read them at one sitting. To do so would run the grave risk of boggle overload.' s
`'...this book should be compulsory reading for research directors.'' Chemistry in Britain
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