realthog: (leavingfortusa)
2008-08-14 02:41 pm

HuffPlug


Although it's not fiction but nonfiction, my book Corrupted Science has this morning been given a mention at the bottom of Jeff VanderMeer's round-up of political fiction on The Huffington Post

. . . and John Grant's Corrupted Science: Fraud, Ideology, and Politics (FFF, hardcover) which includes a scathing expose of George W. Bush's subversion of science that reads more like fiction than fact, has just been given a big push by the publisher and is once again available in your local chain bookstore.

Of the novels Jeff reviews, the one that I must get hold of once I can allow myself again, finally, to read for leisure rather than research is The Pisstown Chaos by David Ohle (Soft Skull Press); it looks to be tailormade for moi. Lipsmacking.


 
realthog: (real copies!)
2008-07-01 01:28 pm

Clarkesworld interview


An interview with me by Jeff VanderMeer has just gone live at Clarkesworld. The focus is largely on my book Corrupted Science, but in my usual butterfly fashion I woffle on about all sorts of other subjects too.

There's a further small coverage on Jeff's own blog Ecstatic Days.

 
realthog: (sunset)
2008-04-07 05:08 pm

another blog review of Corrupted Science


. . . and in fact of Discarded Science, too, this time by Jeff VanderMeer. He says, in part:

These are beautifully designed small-sized hardcovers that cover fraud, deception, and hoaxes in science, along with theories that, as the author says, "seemed like a good idea at the time." . . . What easily could have devolved into a mere listing of facts and circumstances instead becomes something deeper and more profound. Many of these stories are hilarious, but many are also horrifying. . . . Along with incisive and often devastating anecdotes that seem to prove we're really more ruled by emotion and a need for fame than by our intellects, Grant makes the point again and again that although science itself has a kind of objectivity, scientists often do not. . . . [W]hat Grant has written here is a history of the world focusing on human deception and folly in science. The writing is funny, humane, insightful, and balanced. I think these are my two favorite finds of the year thus far. . . .

Please do go and read the whole thing at http://www.omnivoracious.com/2008/04/what-do-you-fin.html.