Michael D. Lemonick
Author of The Georgian Star: How William and Caroline Herschel Revolutionized Our Understanding of the Cosmos
About the Author
Michael D. Lemonick is senior science writer at Time magazine, where he has written more than forty cover stories on a wide range of science-related topics. He has also written for Discover, Playboy, and other publications
Works by Michael D. Lemonick
The Georgian Star: How William and Caroline Herschel Revolutionized Our Understanding of the Cosmos (2008) 118 copies, 4 reviews
The Light at the Edge of the Universe: Leading Cosmologists on the Brink of a Scientific Revolution (1993) 60 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1953
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Harvard University
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism - Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Princeton, New Jersey, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- New Jersey, USA
Members
Reviews
Lonni Sue Johnson was a person of huge abilities. She was a gifted artist who, among other things, created many ‘New Yorker’ covers. She was a skilled and passionate violist. She got her private pilot’s license and had her own plane and airfield. She wrote a newspaper column. She, with a partner, started an organic dairy. When she was interested in something, she flung herself headlong into it and mastered it. She never met a challenge she couldn’t best.
Then she got sick. She ran a show more high fever with encephalitis. For a while it looked like she wouldn’t live, or, if she did, that she would have severe brain damage, and possibly never wake up. The fever burned out the temporal lobes of her brain- the hippocampus- which is where our memories are made and stored. While she remembered her family, she remembered little else of her past. And she couldn’t lay down new memories- everything that happened to her was forgotten in ten or fifteen minutes. Anyone other than her sister and mother were greeted with “Hello. My name is Lonni Sue; what’s yours?” even if the person has just returned to the room after an absence of mere minutes.
Her abilities, on the other hand, remain intact, although they took time and work to regain. She can play the viola, but her music is deemed emotionless. She can draw and paint, and her passion right now is creating word search puzzles that are embellished with drawings. But… the four page puzzles are never finished. Not a single one. Something makes her give them up before that final page is created.
She has been endlessly tested by neurologists, and has contributed to the knowledge base about the working brain. She charms everyone she meets; scientists and techs love her as a subject and a person.
The book is a combination of personal history and neurology, including information on another famous case of hippocampus destruction, H.M., although in his case, the hippocampus was removed surgically in hopes of stopping uncontrolled seizures. While the book is interesting, it’s not in the same league as other neurology/neuropsychology books like those written by the late Oliver Sacks or V. Ramachandran. There are a large number of pages devoted to Johnson’s family (who dedicated their lives to keeping Lonni Sue as normalized as possible), and to her past that, while they make us closer to her, don’t really advance the story of her brain. It’s an okay book, but not a really gripping one. show less
Then she got sick. She ran a show more high fever with encephalitis. For a while it looked like she wouldn’t live, or, if she did, that she would have severe brain damage, and possibly never wake up. The fever burned out the temporal lobes of her brain- the hippocampus- which is where our memories are made and stored. While she remembered her family, she remembered little else of her past. And she couldn’t lay down new memories- everything that happened to her was forgotten in ten or fifteen minutes. Anyone other than her sister and mother were greeted with “Hello. My name is Lonni Sue; what’s yours?” even if the person has just returned to the room after an absence of mere minutes.
Her abilities, on the other hand, remain intact, although they took time and work to regain. She can play the viola, but her music is deemed emotionless. She can draw and paint, and her passion right now is creating word search puzzles that are embellished with drawings. But… the four page puzzles are never finished. Not a single one. Something makes her give them up before that final page is created.
She has been endlessly tested by neurologists, and has contributed to the knowledge base about the working brain. She charms everyone she meets; scientists and techs love her as a subject and a person.
The book is a combination of personal history and neurology, including information on another famous case of hippocampus destruction, H.M., although in his case, the hippocampus was removed surgically in hopes of stopping uncontrolled seizures. While the book is interesting, it’s not in the same league as other neurology/neuropsychology books like those written by the late Oliver Sacks or V. Ramachandran. There are a large number of pages devoted to Johnson’s family (who dedicated their lives to keeping Lonni Sue as normalized as possible), and to her past that, while they make us closer to her, don’t really advance the story of her brain. It’s an okay book, but not a really gripping one. show less
Books written by science journalists are always suspect, but Lemonick does a good job of parsing the science while still keeping the language of the layman. He discusses the history of the Big Bang theory, and the process of collecting evidence to support or disprove Big Bang. The book goes into great detail about the process of acquiring and launching the satellite, and as such is probably more interesting to engineers and technophiles than to those who are interested in the actual science show more of the Big Bang. There is a decent discussion of what was discovered, but it is condensed into small bits that are less than fully satisfying. If you're interested in the ins and outs of the building of the satellites, or the process of obtaining grants from NASA and others, than this is the book for you. If you're looking for the actual science in detail, there are books that do a better job of covering this, and several that are more recent, which is crucial in cosmology. show less
The only problem with writing about the history of extraterrestrial worlds is we have neither met any organism from another planet nor received any transmission from another planetary system. So, Michael Lemonick’s Other Worlds focuses on how Earth’s inhabitants are trying to find planets outside the Solar System.
All of this attention is due to the Drake equation, first posited in 1961. This equation was devised to try to calculate the number of extraterrestrial planets and the show more probability of interacting with them.
So, Lemonick traveled around the country, visiting with top-tier astronomers and cosmologists to gain a better insight into the ongoing experiments designed to help us gain a better understanding of the universe. From the Keck Observatory in Hawai’i to the many projects underway at NASA, he delves into both the mechanisms required to find extraterrestrial life and the implications for mankind in general.
The book has a more journalistic tone than a scientific one, but on the whole, this volume fits more in the 500s (science) than the 900s, but who am I to argue with the Library of Congress? I enjoyed it a lot, though. So much so, that upon buying a house, I plan to buy a decent telescope to investigate local astronomical interests.
Full review at: http://lifelongdewey.wordpress.com/2012/04/07/999-other-worlds-by-michael-lemoni... show less
All of this attention is due to the Drake equation, first posited in 1961. This equation was devised to try to calculate the number of extraterrestrial planets and the show more probability of interacting with them.
So, Lemonick traveled around the country, visiting with top-tier astronomers and cosmologists to gain a better insight into the ongoing experiments designed to help us gain a better understanding of the universe. From the Keck Observatory in Hawai’i to the many projects underway at NASA, he delves into both the mechanisms required to find extraterrestrial life and the implications for mankind in general.
The book has a more journalistic tone than a scientific one, but on the whole, this volume fits more in the 500s (science) than the 900s, but who am I to argue with the Library of Congress? I enjoyed it a lot, though. So much so, that upon buying a house, I plan to buy a decent telescope to investigate local astronomical interests.
Full review at: http://lifelongdewey.wordpress.com/2012/04/07/999-other-worlds-by-michael-lemoni... show less
The "exoplaneteers". As the era of exoplanet discovery nears its 20th birthday, this easily readable history focuses on the many people (not just big names like Michel Mayor and Geoff Marcy) who have pushed the various detection methods (radial-velocity measurement, transit photometry, gravitational microlensing) to ever greater effectiveness. Included, of course, are the people associated with the transit-detecting Kepler space mission. Now if only the launch of the Terrestrial Planet show more Finder mission were not on indefinite hold, there would be a good chance of exo-life being proven to exist while I still do. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Members
- 410
- Popularity
- #59,367
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 10
- ISBNs
- 22
















