Where are my heroes? Whenever I'm reading a book by one of my
favorite authors I find I'm falling for the wrong guy -- not the hero,
but the other man -- and what I really want is for him to have his own
story.
Like Jake Linley, from Someone to Watch Over Me by Lisa Kleypas…that doctor could sit by my bedside if I ever got sick. And Ned Blydon in Splendid by Julia Quinn...he makes me want to learn to waltz! I never thought living in a drafty castle would be much fun until Simon of Ravenswood in Master of Desire by Kinley MacGregor came along.
Anyway, I just wanted to let you know that these are my men -- when do they get their stories?
Icon: Steve Jobs, The Greatest Second Act in the History of Business is an unauthorised biography by Jeffrey S. Young and William L. Simon about the return of Steve Jobs to Apple Inc in 1996.
The book was published in 2005 by John Wiley & Sons.
Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other Essays By Stephen Hawking
By Stephen Hawking
Read By Simon Prebble
By Stephen Hawking
Read By Simon Prebble
By Stephen Hawking
Read By Simon Prebble
By Stephen Hawking
Read By Simon Prebble
Hawking is quite probably the most admired and recognizable figure in science today. His A Brief History of Time ( LJ 4/15/88) was a surprise best seller that stimulated a public fascination with this man who, although stricken with a debilitating neurological disease, is widely regarded as the most brilliant theoretical physicist since Einstein.
These essays range from the autobiographical to the purely scientific. Building on his earlier work, Stephen Hawking discusses imaginary time, how black holes can give birth to baby universes, and scientists’ efforts to find a complete, unified theory that would predict everything in the universe, a concept he believes will come to seem as natural to the next generation as our current idea that the world is round.
Unfolding the great mysteries of the universe as a backdrop, Stephen Hawking also reflects on free will, the value of life, and his perceptions of death. He looks at how scientific theory converges with - and diverges from - science fiction, as well as how scientific fact interfaces with our own lives.
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