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dobbspic I write articles on science, medicine, nature, culture and other matters for the New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, Slate, National Geographic, Scientific American Mind, and other publications, and am working on my fourth book, The Orchid and the Dandelion, which expands on my recent December 2009 Atlantic article. In August 2010, I'll be moving to London for a year to work on the book. I'll also serve as a senior fellow at City University London's MA science journalism program.

You're encouraged to check out my third book Reef Madness: Charles Darwin, Alexander Agassiz, and the Meaning of Coral, which traces the strangest but most forgotten controversy in Darwin's career; subscribe to Neuron Culture by email; see more of my work at my main website; or track Twitter feed, my Google Reader shared items, or my Tumblr log, which gets it all.

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    On the reading table lately

    Posted on: October 2, 2009 7:00 AM, by David Dobbs

    Been a while, so these cover a span of reading.

    I'm in the midst of my friend Adrienne Mayor's The Poison King: The Life and Legend of Mithradates, Rome's Deadliest Enemy, and can report that Mr. M is quite a poisonous but complicated handful -- a dark and deadly echo of his hero and model, Alexander -- and this reconstruction a splendid read.

    A few weeks ago I finished Thomas Ricks' The Gamble, an excellent account of the surge in Iraq. Ricks -- who earlier wrote Fiasco, a devastating indictment of the run-up to the war, makes three things quite clear:

    1. The surge was not about more soldiers, but soldiers doing different things -- protecting the populace rather than hunting the enemy. They killed fewer enemies -- but reduced even further the number of new enemies made.
    2. This made things safer for both Iraqis and Americans, but didn't necessarily solve any long-term problems.
    3. We're going to be there a long long time.

    While researching a feature I wrote that will be appearing soon in a major magazine near you, I read:

    Deborah Blum's Love at Goon Park: Harry Harlow and the Science of Affection. First-rate history of science here, and a fascinating look at Harry Harlow, a monkey researcher whose powerful but sometimes disturbing experiments in the middle decades of last century helped replace a cold behavioralist view of infancy and childhood with the theories of attachment and bonding that still rule today.

    The 10,000-Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution, by Harry Harpending and Gregory Cochran. "The Beak of the Finch (a favorite of mine), but this time about us.

    And amid those I read Cormac McCarthy's No Country For Old Men, which went through me like a bullet. Withering. Beautiful.



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