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Ronald Breslow. American Chemical Society:
Washington, DC, 1997, ix + 134 pages. ISBN 0841234604. $19.95.
For those of us who have been asked just what a
chemist does, and why, and not known quite how to respond:
help is at hand. Breslow has provided a brief and lucid
introduction to chemistry and its central role in the
contemporary world. Indeed, the easy option of just buying the book
and presenting it to your curious friend should work
well. Breslow has obviously been careful to keep the
complexity of presentation, language, and length at levels well short
of exceeding the capacity of a typical scientifically
untrained reader. The organization, concentrating first on
applications (such as health, production of consumer goods,
environmental issues) and later on concepts (catalysis, synthesis,
structure, mechanism), is also well conceived for the purpose
of keeping readers' interest from flagging. Personally, I
think Breslow may have been a little too concerned about
keeping things clear and simple: he avoids the risks of
complexity, but at the expense of muting some of the richness
and excitement of the practice of chemistry. Nonetheless, as
a first introduction to the subject (especially for high
school students wondering whether they might have a future
in chemistry), this book is an attractive contribution.
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