![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
27 June 2008
Under God's Skin sold to Norton
20 June 2008
Devil's Derivatives sold to Harvard and Yale
Nicholas Dunbar's The Devil's Derivatives has been acquired at auction by Jacqueline Murphy at Harvard Business Press in the US and by Phoebe Clapham at Yale University Press in the UK. In the book, Nicholas tells the story of how innovation in the selling of financial risk spawned a culture of complexity and an illusion of consumer wealth. As well as showing how this triggered the credit crunch, he also explores what kind of financial system we should desire for the future. It's a story that Nicholas, as editor of Risk magazine, the bible of derivatives traders, is uniquely placed to tell. The deal was brokered in the US by Christy Fletcher at Fletcher & Parry on behalf of the Science Factory.
18 June 2008
Decoding the Heavens in Japan
17 June 2008
Climate change book wins science prize
Congratulations to the journalist Mark Lynas, winner of the 2007 Royal Society Science Book Award for his book Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet. Published by Fourth Estate in the UK and by National Geographic in the US, the book tracks what our planet may look like as it warms in the future, with each chapter upping the temperature by one degree. The £10,000 prize was awarded last night at the Royal Society in London. Lynas beat the Science Factory's own shortlisted writers – Stuart Clark (The Sun Kings) and Ian Stewart (Why Beauty is Truth) – as well as Gerd Gigerenzer, Craig Venter and Steve Jones, who each received a cheque for £1,000. The prize for the best children's science book went to The Big Book of Science Things to Make and Do, written by Rebecca Gilpin and Leonie Pratt, and designed and illustrated by Josephine Thompson.
11 June 2008
Oneworld acquires The End of Sex by Aarathi Prasad
The End of Sex: The Quest for Reproduction without Men by the biology writer Aarathi Prasad has been bought by Marsha Filion at Oneworld in a World English deal for publication in Spring 2009. In this wide-ranging tour of the past, present and future of sex, Aarathi investigates how reproduction without sex is achieved in animals and explores why evolution hasn't made it an option for humans – yet. For as she puts it in, now that we have the competent hand of science in our lives, will girls still need men?
|
recent posts
monthly archives
|
| THE SCIENCE FACTORY IS POWERED BY STEVE ACCESSIBILITY HELP W3C RSS |