About the Author:
Ian Stewart was born in 1945, educated at Cambridge (MA) and Warwick (PhD). He has five honorary doctorates and is Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at Warwick University. He has published over 80 books including Does God Play Dice?, Professor Stewart's Cabinet of Mathematical Curiosities, Why Beauty is Truth, Flatterland, What Shape is a Snowflake?, Nature's Numbers, Professor Stewart's Incredible Numbers, Seventeen Equations that Changed the World, and the bestselling series The Science of Discworld I, II, III, and IV with Terry Pratchett and Jack Cohen. His new book Calculating the Cosmos will appear in September 2016 followed by Infinity: a Very Short Introduction in 2017. His awards include the Royal Society's Faraday Medal, the Gold Medal of the Institute for Mathematics and Its Applications, the Public Understanding of Science Award of the AAAS, and the LMS/IMA Zeeman Medal. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2001 and currently serves on Council, its governing body. He makes frequent radio and television appearances, including the 1997 Christmas Lectures. He is an active research mathematician with over 190 published papers, and works on pattern formation, chaos, network dynamics, and biomathematics. Jack Cohen is a retired biologist (hair, feathers, reproduction) and IVF consultant. His former students include Sir Paul Nurse, winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize for Medicine. He has been a Visiting Professor at the Weizmann Institute, Israel, and a consultant to the Ecosystems Unit and the Mathematics Institute at the University of Warwick, England. He has a longstanding interest in biologically realistic aliens and alien ecosystems, and has acted as consultant to top science fiction authors including Anne McCaffrey, Larry Niven, and David Gerrold. His books include Living Embryos, Reproduction, The Privileged Ape, and Stop Working and Start Thinking. With Terry Pratchett and Ian Stewart he wrote the bestselling four-volume Science of Discworld series. He and Stewart also coauthored The Collapse of Chaos, Figments of Reality, and What Does a Martian Look Like?, plus two SF novels, Wheelers and Heaven. Their SF short story Monolith was the final one in the first "Futures" series of the prestigious science journal Nature. His hobbies include boomerang-throwing and keeping strange animals. He has been married three times, has six children, and lives in Dorset, England.
From Publishers Weekly:
Though Stewart, a mathematician, and Cohen, a reproductive biologist, have each written popular science books (they coauthored The Collapse of Chaos), this is the first SF novel either has attempted, with generally positive results. In the 23rd century, after a period of antitechnological sentiment on Earth, a small sect of Tibetan Buddhists gains a singular foothold in space, colonizing the moon and building a high-tech habitat and ore-processing facility called Cuckoo's Nest in the midst of the asteroid belt. Interplanetary travel and commerce thrive for those willing to take the risk, like discredited archeologist Prudence Odingo. No one believes her claim of recovering 100,000-year-old wheeled artifacts from the ice of Jupiter's moon CallistoAuntil one of the "wheelers" comes to "life." While the official research team is stymied by traditional scientific approaches, Odingo and her multitalented companions open communications with the intelligent, blimplike aliens they discover in great cities floating in Jupiter's dense atmosphere. Human contact leads to possibly catastrophic consequences for Earth. Although their characters and world-building lack believability, the authors wield scientific speculation with cheerful abandon, providing some real old-fashioned sense of wonder. Fans of hard SF authors Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle will get a kick out of Stewart and Cohen's SF debut. (Nov.)
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