1: A Picture Speaks a Thousand Words
2: Germany Has Much to Teach us
3: A Keen Young Man
4: Into the Wilderness
5: The X-Ray Vatican
6: A Pile of Pennies
7: Avery's Bombshell
8: Nunc Dimittis
9: One Grand Leap ... Too Far
10: The Road Not Taken
11: The Man in the Monkeynut Coat
Kersten Hall graduated from St. Anne's College, Oxford University,
with BA Honours in Biochemistry before completing a PhD at the
University of Leeds on the regulation of human genes by viruses. He
then worked as a research fellow in molecular biology in the School
of Medicine, University of Leeds. During this time he cultivated a
growing interest in the history of science and is now a Visiting
Fellow in the School of Philosophy, Religion and the History of
Science
at the University of Leeds where his research focuses on the
history of genetics and molecular biology. He lives in Leeds with
his wife and two sons.
Construction of the Watson-Crick model of DNA in the middle of the
last century was a key event in scientific history. The surrounding
controversies and the larger-than-life players have been widely
described but continue to fascinate. By focussing on the lesser
known figure of William Astbury, a pioneer in X-ray diffraction
studies of biological fibres, this readable account brings a fresh
interpretation and new insight. Astbury, widely regarded as a
founder of molecular biology, is also shown to have had an
understanding of protein structure that was ahead of its time, an
understanding that helped create new textiles and a 'monkeynut'
coat.
*Iain Campbell, Department of Biochemistry, University of
Oxford*
This fascinating biography of the founder of molecular biology, the
biocrystallographer Willam Astbury, reads like a detective story.
Very rich in details, it paints a vivid picture of the scientific
scene round Astbury, and reveals some unknown key aspects of the
quest for the structure of DNA.
*André Authier, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris*
The storyline works very well and I was gripped from the beginning
to the end of the book. The author describes numerous stories that
capture the human interest aspects of doing science, with its pains
and its jubilations.
*John R. Helliwell, University of Manchester*
... an excellent, stylish historical account of the early days of
biophysics.
*The Biologist, Professor Jack Cohen FSB*
Fascinating book. I particularly enjoyed reading about Astbury's
background and impressive wide-ranging activities.
*Jenifer Glynn, author of My Sister Rosalind Franklin*
Hall''s book provides a useful historical corrective to the notion
that all scientists are heroes; some of them are disappointed
men.
*The Guardian, Stephen Curry*
In The Double Helix, James Watson wrote the Leeds scientist William
Astbury out of the story of what, for many, is the greatest
biological discovery of the twentieth century. With this superb
book, Kersten Hall has written Astbury back in. The result is far
more than the biography we have long needed of this colourful and
creative pioneer of molecular biology (as Astbury was among the
first to call it). In Hall's marvellously readable and deeply
researched pages, the development of that science emerges as
inseparable from the fortunes of the textiles industry — and from
the misfortunes of a man who, like the monkeynut coat he helped to
invent, disappeared into obscurity despite huge initial
promise.
*Gregory Radick, University of Leeds*
...a fine piece of historical writing rich with illuminating detail
and with real excitement for the subject.
*The British Journal for the History of Science, Kenneth E.
Hendrickson*
A very persuasive argument ... I was left in no doubt that Astbury
left the scientific world a better and more interesting place.
*Rhys Baker, Bio News*
Hall tells his story with style and pace.
*Georgina Ferry, Nature*
I have not been disappointed ... beautifully written and easy to
read ... a job very well done.
*John Jenkin, author of William and Lawrence Bragg, Father and Son:
The Most Extraordinary Collaboration in Science*
Very well-written and informative.
*Gholson J. Lyon, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory*
Kersten Hall has brought into the limelight a normally unsung key
player in the development of modern molecular and structural
biology by writing this very engaging biography of William
Astbury.
*Elspeth Garman, University of Oxford*
This is an excellent account of molecular biology and Astbury's
role in its history.
*Anthony C T North, Crystallography News*
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