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Eric Fish, DVM, PhD's avatar

I assume your title is deliberately puckish, trying to draw in readers and commenters. However, I have to disagree. Besides the several really great science writers you mention in your essay as exceptions, there are so SO many excellent ones out there!

* Medicine: Atul Gawande, Siddhartha Mukherjee, Oliver Sacks, and so many others have been able to bring a literary aesthetic and philosophical musings to both the art of medicine and the science of cell biology

* Psychology: The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk is *THE* authority on the neurobiology of trauma and therapeutic approaches to it. It is solidly grounded in research, but lyrical and moving as well

* Economics: "Thinking Fast, and Slow" by Daniel Kahneman is the bible of behavioral economics and applied statistics, and genuinely a page turner. I think about it often

* Physics: Brian Greene is able to write about quantum physics as an actual expert without bullshitting (like some of his astrophysics colleagues, cough, cough) and he's able to make it understandable and INTERESTING to non-physicists through excellent metaphors and yes, witty jokes

* Statistics: Nate Silver may be a polarizing figure for his Twitter presence and checkered prediction record, but his book "The Signal and The Noise" is a surprisingly digestible and entertaining look at statistics using examples from poker, gambling, to power laws in terrorism and natural disasters

* Multi-genre: Mary Roach is a terrific science writer who can make even the story of dead bodies ("stiff") interesting!

I could go on and on and think of more examples, but I think I've proved my point. You might quibble with some of these authors, but I found them enjoyable reads that left me knowing more than I did before. As with most things, I think science writing is very much a "your mileage may vary" thing that comes down to individual taste preferences. And as always, there's no shortage of bad writers! But this applies just as easily to fiction, biographies, and history as it does to science writing. Frankly, given the much smaller pool of titles, I'd say the genre punches above its weight in quality

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Stetson's avatar

If readers are curious whether Erik Hoel's book escaped the traps of popular science writing, check out my review: https://stetson.substack.com/p/intrinsic-primacy-consciousness-the

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