Kip Thorne’s Black Holes and Time Warps is an essential paperback (Papermac, £10, ISBN 0 333 63969 3). He examines Einstein’s inheritance in the hands of his followers in lucid and clear prose: for example showing the problems and pleasures of estimating the enormous randomness of black holes; why it makes sense to treat them as membranes; time travel; and the chancy nature of reality, conditioned, as the poet Lawrence Durrell had it, by one’s position in space and time. One step in either direction, and reality changes.
More from New Scientist
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending New Scientist articles
1
Woman with Alzheimer's starts conversing again after taking psilocybin
2
How menopause radically changes the brain – and what happens after
3
Faecal transplant makes the brains of old mice act young again
4
Our verdict on The Selfish Gene: An unpopular piece of popular science
5
If you aren't terrified by this heatwave, you should be
6
Ancient human DNA found on cave art for the first time
7
The race to understand how and when Thwaites glacier will collapse
8
I have a 100 per cent chance of getting cancer due to a rare gene
9
Where, when and how to watch the 2026 solar eclipse
10
We’ve uncovered a master gene that switches on human development



