If you’re in any doubt about the horrific and macabre nature of antipersonnel weapons and the people who design them, The Technology of Killing by Eric Prokosch (Zed Books, £16.95, ISBN 1 85649 358 X) will set you straight It begins with the science of wound ballistics – how a munitions fragment travelling at speed rips through a body creating shock waves that pulverise organs far from the wound – and describes American military volumes filled with pictures of naked, dead soldiers with parts of their bodies blown away and captioned “Wound of entrance” and “Wound of exit”. Not for the faint-hearted.
More from New Scientist
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending New Scientist articles
1
Where, when and how to watch the 2026 solar eclipse
2
Our verdict on The Selfish Gene: An unpopular piece of popular science
3
We’ve uncovered a master gene that switches on human development
4
If you aren't terrified by this heatwave, you should be
5
The race to understand how and when Thwaites glacier will collapse
6
The best sci-fi novel in 2026 so far – plus 6 other great reads
7
Europe’s heatwave is the hottest and most humid ever
8
Ancient human DNA found on cave art for the first time
9
I have a 100 per cent chance of getting cancer due to a rare gene
10
How menopause radically changes the brain – and what happens after



