Book Reviews
- The previous book I finished (end to end) was Nick Lane's 'The Vital Question'. This one was a real eye-opener for me in that it introduced to me an entirely new vocabulary of how to think about biology. The book ends with Eukaryotic cells. It's a good segway to Metazoans.Link to Tweet
- Nick Lane's books are So. Good. https://t.co/zyw0GYpmduLink to Tweet
About Book
Why is life the way it is? Bacteria evolved into complex life just once in four billion years of life on earth-and all complex life shares many strange properties, from sex to ageing and death. If life evolved on other planets, would it be the same or completely different? In The Vital Question, Nick Lane radically reframes evolutionary history, putting forward a cogent solution to conundrums that have troubled scientists for decades. The answer, he argues, lies in energy: how all life on Earth lives off a voltage with the strength of a bolt of lightning. In unravelling these scientific enigmas, making sense of life's quirks, Lane's explanation provides a solution to life's vital questions: why are we as we are, and why are we here at all? This is ground-breaking science in an accessible form, in the tradition of Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species, Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene, and Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs and Steel.