From Publishers Weekly
Though Bartusiak prefaces this anthology of astronomy-related documents by lamenting the fact that astronomy books often leave out "the voices of the scientists themselves," it soon becomes clear why such voices are regularly silenced. Among the many famous authors presented hereGalileo, Einstein, Kepler, Newton, Copernicus, etc.no voice shines through as accessibly as that of Bartusiak herself. The author of Thursdays Universe and Through a Universe Darkly has sewn together this collection of historical reprints with an admirable number of original, explanatory essays that situate each document within a larger scientific history, clarifying each papers importance and showing how each discovery set the foundation for the next. For serious astronomy enthusiasts, this book will surely become a well-loved resource. But many of the original documents are dense and dry, and casual readers will prefer to turn to one of Bartusiaks previous books to learn more about the workings of the stars and planets.
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From Scientific American
Here the reader gets not only a clear and concise history of astronomy but also excerpts from many of the memorable papers written by the scientists who made the pivotal astronomical discoveries. The history comes in Bartusiak's fine introductions to the eight periods she describes and to the individual papers. The authors include such eminent figures as Ptolemy, Copernicus, Albert Einstein and Alan H. Guth. Bartusiak, a science writer who teaches at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, set as her focus "the discoveries that came to define the universe as we now know it: its composition, its various members, its structure, its evolution."
Editors of Scientific American
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