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Avoid Boring People

And other lessons from a life in science

James D. Watson (, Chancellor, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

$51.95

Hardback

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English
Oxford University Press
01 January 2008
`ames D. Watson looks back on his extraordinary and varied career -- from its beginnings as a schoolboy in Chicago's South Side to the day he left Harvard almost 50 years later, world-renowned as the co-discoverer of DNA -- and considers the lessons he has learnt along the way.

The result is both an engagingly eccentric memoir and an insightful compendium of lessons in life for aspiring scientists.

Watson's 'manners' range from those he learnt bird-watching with his father during the Great Depression ('Avoid fighting bigger boys and dogs' and 'Find a young hero to emulate') to the manners appropriate for a Nobel Prize ('Have friends close to those who rule').

He evokes his time as a graduate student in the 1940s ('Hire spunky lab helpers'); the excitement of working in DNA for the first time as well as having his first dates; his time working as a White House advisor; and at Harvard in the '70s.

Avoid Boring People is a quirky, original, wise, and infuriatingly un-put-downable blend of candid anecdotes and revealing insights into the life of one of the greatest scientists of the 20th century.

By:  
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 241mm,  Width: 162mm,  Spine: 35mm
Weight:   1g
ISBN:   9780192802736
ISBN 10:   0192802739
Pages:   368
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1: Manners acquired as a child (Chicago's South Side) 2: Manners learned while an undergraduate 3: Manners picked up in graduate school 4: Manners followed by the Phage Group 5: Manners passed on to an apprentice scientist 6: Manners needed for important science 7: Manners practiced as an untenured professor 8: Manners deployed for academic zing 9: Manners noticed as a dispensable White House advisor 10: Manners appropriate for a Nobel Prize 11: Manners demanded by academic ineptitude 12: Manners behind for readable books 13: Manners required for academic civility 14: Manners displayed to hold two jobs 15: Manners felt reluctantly leaving Harvard Epilogue

Reviews for Avoid Boring People: And other lessons from a life in science

Age cannot whither nor custom stale the sharp tongue of Honest Jim - the title the Nobel Prize - winning Watson (DNA: The Secret of Life, 2003, etc.) originally wanted for The Double Helix, his first tell-all account of science and personal history.Now in his late 70s, Watson chronicles his life from birth through middle age. We learn of a close-knit family and an early love of ornithology, but the even greater appeal of genetics by the time of graduate school. Watson's career took off as he began working with hot-shot geneticists studying bacterial viruses (phages) like the future Nobelists Salvador Luria and Max Delbruck. Indeed, the names of Watson's mentors, peers and former graduate students read like a Who's Who in molecular biology. They also underscore some of the remembered lessons he adds to each chapter, e.g., choose a young thesis advisor ; choose an objective apparently ahead of its time. The main text deals with the years Watson taught at Harvard and later when he became director of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island, moving it from near bankruptcy to growth and continued pre-eminence. Watson has certainly made his mark as scientist, teacher, textbook writer, nurturer of talent and canny administrator. But Honest Jim also made known his contempt for mediocre faculty and administrators, and he lost a key battle in trying to get Harvard to fund tumor virus studies - the Next Big Thing in the '60s and '70s. Around that time, Jim, ever the nerd, finally met and won the lovely Liz, a Radcliffe undergraduate who married the 39-year-old bachelor in 1968. The chronicle ends abruptly in the mid-'70s, save for a shocker of an epilogue 30 years later. Watson again confronts Harvard with the need to beef up basic science only to face Larry Summers and later Derek Bok, who had distinctly other ideas - though Watson does not fault Summers for his conjecture on women in science.Vintage Watson: brash, bumptious, brilliant - and never boring. (Kirkus Reviews)


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