Tim Bradford is obsessed with underground rivers, London, cats, peculiar questions and vitriolic correspondence between 19th-century experts over rivers. He piles all this into The Groundwater Diaries (HarperCollins/Flamingo, £8.99), a wander around the lost rivers of (mostly) north London. He can bore for Britain on some topics, but there is always a gem or two waiting on the next page. It’s good for accumulating obscure facts to quash know-it-alls. The problem is that you may end up as the repulsive know-it-all.
To continue reading, today with our introductory offers
Advertisement
More from New Scientist
Explore the latest news, articles and features

Technology
People training new AI models admit they just get chatbots to do it
News

Advertorial
The defence sector can’t adopt a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach to AI
Advertising

Advertorial
Why the future of defence is drone tech and distributed edge computing
Advertising

Advertorial
The future of defence lies in transatlantic industrial partnerships
Advertising
Popular articles
Trending New Scientist articles
1
We've found a mysterious substance on Titan and Pluto
2
A quantum state that lasts forever may finally be within our grasp
3
Has the answer to life's origins been hiding in our cells all along?
4
Most portable air conditioners suck – but there's an easy fix
5
Technology is changing our perspective on nature – at every scale
6
Can prebiotics, probiotics or postbiotics help your ageing microbiome?
7
Faecal transplant makes the brains of old mice act young again
8
The simple questions cracking the hard problem of consciousness
9
The one film to watch before seeing Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day
10
Remarkable fossils rewrite the story of how animals conquered the land