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The Magic of Reality: How we know what's really true [Hardcover]

Richard Dawkins , Dave McKean
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (90 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Bantam Press (15 Sep 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 059306612X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0593066126
  • Product Dimensions: 24.6 x 19.6 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (90 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 892 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Richard Dawkins
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Product Description

Review

The Magic of Reality provides a beautiful, accessible and wide ranging volume that addresses the questions that all of us have about the universe...written with the masterful and eloquently literate style of perhaps the best popular expositor of science, Richard Dawkins, and delightfully illustrated by Dave McKean. What more could anyone ask for?
--Lawrence Krauss, author of Quantum Man, and A Universe from Nothing.

It's the clearest and most beautifully written introduction to science I've ever read. Again and again I found myself saying "Oh! So that's how genes work!" (or stars, or tectonic plates, or all the other things he explains). Explanations I thought I knew were clarified; things I never understood were made clear for the first time.
--Philip Pullman

From the first sentence it reads with the force and fluency of a classic ... a luminous, authoritative prose that transcends age differences.
--The Times

A charming and free-ranging history of science. --Sunday Times

I wanted to write this book but I wasn't clever enough. Now I've read it, I am. --Ricky Gervais

Stunning in appearance...the book is a triumph. --New Scientist

Prodigiously illustrated and beautifully designed ... I cannot think of a better, or simpler, introduction to science.
--The Guardian

Stunning in appearance ... the book is a triumph. --New Scientist

Prodigiously illustrated and beautifully designed ... I cannot think of a better, or simpler, introduction to science. --Guardian

This book may be exactly what's needed to increase science literacy for readers of all ages. --Publishers Weekly

The text is persuasive whatever one's age ... the chapter on rainbows has the clearest explanation of how they appear that I've ever seen.
--The Financial Times

Dawkins uses a simple, brilliant technique highly appealing to young and old. --The Washington Post

This book is primarily aimed at teenagers, but plenty of adults will get a kick out of it too...McKean's drawings bring the text to life brilliantly ... Dawkins writes convincingly about everything from chemistry to statistics.
--Independent on Sunday

Book Description

A stunning collaboration between a world-famous scientist and outstanding illustrator

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
133 of 144 people found the following review helpful
Reality will out 18 Sep 2011
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I am glad that Dawkins has decided to write a popular science book to include a younger audience. The clarity and humour with which he deftly expounds factual reality (is there any other kind), deserves to be accessible to all.

I read the 265 pages of this book within 24 hours of having received it, not through lack of content, rather because the content was so logical, amusing and beautifully illustrated. Award winning Dave McKean should take some credit here. The Dali-esque depictions of imaginary creatures from other planets were some of my favourites. Pictures aside, if I find a book dull, I fall to sleep very quickly. Despite being familiar with much of the content, I was riveted.

The format of each chapter deserves a mention.
1)Start with a popular misconception about how something was once thought to be explained.
2)Demonstrate the poverty of the myth's ability to generate new and real information.
3)Observe the peculiar, mythological attempt at logic, laugh hard
4)Proceed with the actual, testable and scientific explanation.

Where a question lies outside the boundaries of current understanding or Dawkins personal expertise, he is quick to point this out. Given the title of the book, I was pleased to see that no attempts were made to fudge answers (a standard I would expect), though at times I do suspect a little false modesty.

Being critical, I think a problem that a book like this must face is where to start, because the assumption of prior scientific knowledge would risk losing the target audience. Therefore, popular science aficionardos may find this slow to start. However, the apparently randomly ordered chapter subjects build well upon each other to reveal some of the most interesting content later on.

Any author writing on the nature of truth is bound to expect controversy and I expect the proponents of the myths concerned will be 'up in arms' (again.) This book doesn't suggest that faith in the supernatural cannot feel magical to the believer: rather it emphatically illustrates the exhilarating, magical awe experienced by discovering life's grandeur.
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30 of 32 people found the following review helpful
A beautiful book 3 Oct 2011
By samfalc
Format:Hardcover
A thoroughly excellent and charming read. I would highly recommend this book to anybody regardless of age or experience. As a young man with a fairly good knowledge of popular science I still found myself learning a lot of knew things, and even if I hadn't, the sheer clarity of thought and beauty of the writing would make it more than worthwhile. Not to mention some outstanding illustrations from Dave Mckean.

It should be on the shelves in every household for so many reasons, but I can imagine for parents looking to educate their children in critical thinking then this would be perfect. I certainly would have liked a book like this to have been available in my younger years! I think particularly the structure of the book provides an excellent framework for the content, with each chapter asking one of the profound questions which we have all asked at some point. A must buy.
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114 of 126 people found the following review helpful
By F. Odds
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I'm a huge fan of Richard Dawkins. Despite the claims of his detractors, he is consistently calm and polite when arguing with people who disagree with his views, and his books -- oh, if only his detractors would read and understand them! -- are all lucid, thought-provoking and educational. For Dawkins to produce a book aimed at instilling in young readers a sense of wonder in the magic of the real world was a bold but commendable step. His approach, outlining the myths used by superstitious people to explain what they don't understand then showing how the real explanations are both more satisfying and convincing, is original and effective.

The problem with the book is that it only sometimes achieves what its cover says it intends: to explain HOW we know what's really true. Dawkins has run up against the obstacle that confronts every science teacher at every level. Science has given us so huge and so deep an understanding of our planet and the universe that it is by now impossible to detail the evidence for everything we know to be true. The consequence is science teaching that is often decried as a "wall of facts". There is so much to be learned it allows little room for presentation of the people who made the discoveries and the evidence on which the discoveries were based.

Newton's laws of gravity, Darwin's theory of evolution and Einstein's theories of relativity retain the names of the people who assembled the evidence, but for most familiar scientific "facts" we no longer have any idea whose work and what evidence lay behind their discovery. It is therefore disappointing that a book that sets out to explain how we know what is real so often follows the wall of facts approach. Chemical elements and compounds are described without even a hint how we proved the difference between the two. Crystal structures, behaviour of molecules in solids, liquids and gases, subatomic structures and the bonding flexibility of carbon atoms are all described (beautifully) but not accounted for with evidence. A Dawkins phobic reader would be entitled, for many chapters, to say "so we have to believe this just because it's written down in your book?" Which I think counts as an own goal.

When the book does get into scientific evidence it does so with finesse. The chapter "What is a rainbow" beautifully explains how Newton showed white light is made up of the spectral range of colours. The ingenuity of Newton's work with light beams and prisms leaps off the page at you. And the chapter sets the stage for understanding subsequent accounts of stars and galaxies. If only the same approach could have been used for every part of the subjects covered: but then it would have become a giant book.

Dave McKean's illustrations are brilliant, and the book's layout is so carefully organized that the text amounts to a flowing set of figure legends. Thus the one occasion when a separate caption is given for a figure jars the reader. The incongruous caption in question appears in the chapter on immunity and is made worse by containing an error. The illustration clearly shows antibodies binding to a virus surface, while the legend states that immune T-cells have attached themselves to the virus. This howler is surprising, considering the many colleagues Dawkins could easily have consulted for a cross-check.

For people who really want to read about how evidence for science was obtained, Bill Bryson's "A Short History of Nearly Everything" is an excellent, though not outstanding, attempt. Or you could read Simon Singh's masterpiece "The Big Bang" and get a real sense of the intellectual battle that rages within any scientific arena as new evidence constantly advances the ability of Homo sapiens to comprehend reality.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Atheist indoctrination of children
This book is obviously an attempt (like the God Delusion) to demolish belief in God. Those who are impressed by it must be easily persuaded by simplistic, puerile arguments. Read more
Published 1 day ago by Bookworm
"Wonderful and real. Wonderful because real."
This book is both written and illustrated brilliantly. The author would satisfy any interest a child or adult might have in the basics of science. Read more
Published 1 month ago by opamov
Reality versus myth.
There seems to me a desperate need for books such as this. If I had my way I would have it on the national curriculum. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Mr. John B. Franklin
Compulsory reading in every school for every pupil.
The Magic of Reality should be compulsory reading for every British student in every form of school and college throughout the UK regardless of their faith. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Rosalind Mercer
It didn't engage my son's attention
I am a big fan of Richard's early scientific books (Selfish Gene, River out of Eden ...), so there is a temptation to give this a five star review out of loyalty. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Venton
The Magic of Reality
I bought this book for my eleven-year-old grandson (although I would have liked to keep it myself). His mum tells me he is reading it avidly every night in bed. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Joy
Back to basics
I purchased this book for my daughter who has of yet to read it so i started it & thoroughly enjoyed it . I have read a few R. Read more
Published 2 months ago by D. S. Sample
Fantastic
Extremely well writtern account of human evolution! I purchased the book for my daughter but ended up not letting go!

I would highly recommend this read! Read more
Published 2 months ago by Chris Stock
must read magic
I picked this book out of the local library initially because Richard Dawkins is an atheist and I hadn't read his work before, I beleived it would offend me. Read more
Published 3 months ago by maz
awesome book about awesome things we should all know
When I was a child these are the answers I wanted on complicated questions I had about life. Especially when I believed that atheists were 'devil worshippers' ! Read more
Published 3 months ago by loralove
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