100 Scientific American September 20 18
RECOMMENDED
By Andrea Gawrylewski
IAIN SARJEANT
Getty Images
Autonomy: h st to i
th riv r ss ar o t i
shap r or
by Lawrence D. Burns with Christopher Shulgan.
Ecco 2018 ($27.99)
Self-driving cars once
heroic engineering proto-
types confined to desert
race courses are now being
tested around the Phoenix
Ariz. metropolitan areaâarguably the great-
est trans ition in mobility since the automobile
began. Burns who led R&D at General Motors
for years and consulted on Googleâs autono-
mous car project is an unabashed booster for
the technology. But he and writer Shulgan viv-
idly recount the painful birth of the first robot-
ic racers and highlight the missteps egos and
legal battles that have hampered its progress.
Insider drama aside they pre sent a compel-
ling vision of a future with many fewer cars
less pollution less congestionâand more
freedom to move than ever before.
â W. Way t Gibbs
Ticker: h st to r at
D Ìà ïÂÂÂD ÌyDà ï by Mimi Swartz. Crown 2018 ($27) It was 1963 and O. H. âBudâ Frazier then a medical stu- dent had his hands wrapped around a patientâs heartâhis forceful massage the sole act keeping the man alive. Journalist Swartz chroni- cles the decades-long evolution of top U.S. cardi- D
åùà Âyà ÄÃà ¹Âà D®åïÂà ¹ù Ìï®DïyÃà ¹ ÌyÃ¥
¹ÂïÂyÂy ÌmÃ容åïÃà ¹® Ìy ÌïÃà DïÂï¹ Ìyà åDåïÂyÄ Ã D
yï¹Uù ÌmD ÌDà ïÂÂÂD ÌÂyDà ïÃ3Ây
DÃïùà yÃ¥
details of the profession with panache: a split-sec-
ond decision to put a sheepâs heart into a human
body the challenge of engineering a device that
can maintain blood temperature for hours. Ulti-
mately she contends cardiology was at the mer-
cy of outside forces. When the Challenger shuttle
exploded in 1986 Swar t z writes that failure trans-
lated into more skepticism toward all technology-
UDÃ¥ymÂy ÌmÃ¥D ÌmD ̹ ÌÂÂïyà ®mÂàÌÂù Ìm Ì¹Ã
heart surgery programs. Even matters of the
heart do not unfold in isolation. â Maya Miller
Accessory to War:
5 Ây7 Ìåù§y Ì Ì ÌÂD Ì`yUyïÄyy Ì
åïà ¹ÃÂÄÃ¥Â`Ã¥D ÌmïÂy$ ÌÂïDà Ä
by Neil deGrasse Tyson and Avis Lang.
W. W. Norton 2018 ($30)
âThe roster of nations that
have wielded the most power
on the world stage... are
precisely those nations whose
scientists knew the most
about the universe at any given timeâ assert as-
trophysicist Tyson and writer Lang in this com-
prehensive exploration of the long-standing syn-
ergy between astronomy and warfare. The stars
guided prophesying seers and bloodthirsty raid-
ers in remote antiquity; telescopes were beloved
ï¹¹ Ìå ÌïÂyD`Dmy®ÂyÃ¥D ÌmUDïï ÌyÂy Ìmå¹Â2y ÌDÂÃ¥-
sance Europe; rockets and satellites are now vital
for both generals and Nobel Prizeâwinning aca-
demics. Understanding how and why âthe soft
power of cosmic discoveryâ promotes military
might the authors contend is crucial for stimu-
lating further progress in space scienceâand per-
haps even lasting peace on Ear th. â Lee Billings
With the word âweedâ in its name seaweed cer tainly seems like a resource as unnecessar y as it is inexhaustible. But nature writer Shetterly
details why this hardy alga deserves safeguarding. In evocative prose she describes seaweedâs role in the environment especially in her coastal
¹®y¹ÂÃÂ¹Ä ÌyDåï$D ÌyjÃD ÌmïÂyÃy¹à ÌyĹåïùmÄjÂDà ÿyåïjÃ¥y Ì ÌjyDïD ÌmÃà ¹ïy`ïÂïÃ3ÂyÃà ¹ ÌyÃ¥ÂÃ¥Âyà åĹUy`DùåyïÂyÂà ÂÃ¥Âyà ÄÂDÃ¥Uyy Ì
myà ÌyïymÂDÿyÃ¥ÄÂï`Âymï¹ÂDïÂyà  ÌÂDÿDà Âyïħ ÌÂ¹Ä ÌDåà ¹`§ÄyymÂ¹à  Ìmùåïà ÂD ÌD Ìm`ù Ì ÌDà ÄùåyÃ¥jDÃ¥Äy Ì ÌDÃ¥D`ïÂÿÂåïåÂÂÂï ÌÂï¹à yÂù ÌDïyïÂy
ÂDà ÿyåïï¹Ãà yÿy Ìïà ¹`§ÄyymÂà ¹®mÂÃ¥DÃÃyDà  ÌÂDåïÂyÂÃ¥ÂmÂmÃ3Âyïïyà ÌÄD Ìå¹ïD§yÃ¥DÃ¥yDÄyym`¹¹§ ÌÂ` ÌDååjÿÂÃ¥ÂïåDÂD`ï¹à Ĺà Ã!y ÌÃ!à ù Ì`ÂUDà åÃ
and travels with a biologist who studies how baby eider ducks depend on seaweed to survive. â Clara Moskowitz
Seaweed
Chronicles:
or at th
atrs g
by Susan Hand Shetterly.
Algonquin Books
2018 ($24.95)
BLADDER WRACK seaweed on
the Orkney Islands in Scotland.