ThatsNeato NeatoShop
Enter Keywords:
Index : Product Listings : Product DetailsBack


  View Larger
Far Out: 101 Strange Tales From Science's Outer Edge
By Mark Pilkington ( The Disinformation Company )
Release Date: 2007-10-01
Average Customer Rating:
List Price: $11.95
Price: $9.56
Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
 Add to Cart 

Product Description

Mark Pilkington charts some of the more curious byways, scenic detours, and inspired failures of scientists, inventors, and, yes, crackpots, over the past few hundred years.

From the Aquatic Ape Hypothesis to zero-point energy, via the Hieronymous Machine and Phlogiston, Far Out tells the stories that are all too often ignored, lost, or simply forgotten by conventional science books. Some of them are perhaps best left languishing in the margins of history, but others may yet change our future. Entries cover physics, chemistry, biology, archaeology, parapsychology, psychology, and other areas yet to be inducted into mainstream science, including radionics, keranography, erotoxin, and remote viewing.

Written in a succinctand engaging style, each piece provides a useful, self-contained introduction to its topic, and provides enough information to allow readers to discover more if they so desire.

Far Out is the latest in the unique CD-sized book format from Disinformation, following the best-selling 50 Things You're Not Supposed To Know series by Russ Kick. Once again, the book is printed in two colors, with the entries arranged into sections, many with appropriate illustrations, diagrams, or photographs.

Mark Pilkington is a freelance journalist, writer, and editor. As well as writing the "Far Out" column for the Guardian on which this book is based, he has also written for The London Times, Fortean Times, Arthur, and The Wire, among others. He also edits the highly praised anthology of cultural marginalia, Strange Attractor, and runs Strange Attractor Press.


Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

I Could Tell You But Then You Would Have to be Destroyed by Me: Emblems from the Pentagon's Black World

Do Not Open

The Dord, the Diglot, and an Avocado or Two: The Hidden Lives and Strange Origins of Common and Not-So-Common Words

Intermediate States: The Anomalist 13

Top Secret Tourism: Your Travel Guide to Germ Warfare Laboratories, Clandestine Aircraft Bases and Other Places in the United States You're Not Supposed to Know About

Product Reviews:
  Will wonders never cease? ( robcurtross )

For two years, Mark Pilkington wrote the "Far Out" column for the "Guardian's" science section. These columns have now been collected and annotated in this beautifully printed little book. Illustrations, diagrams, and photographs enhance the text. Anyone who loves scientific inquiry will enjoy roaming through some really crackpot ideas.

Some of the geniuses here belong in the pseudo-scientific or even on the fraudulent fringes of science. But, every once in awhile we learn about an idea from a "real" scientist. For example, Nikola Tesla, who pioneered the use of AC electricity, also claimed to have invented a death ray. (The passage reminded me of the wonderful movie The Prestige and Tesla's teleportation machine created on order of a London magician.)

Each short entry tackles a single report: electronic voice phenomena, The Cerebrophone, the memory of water, Skinner's Box, plant sentience, the Aether, pets predicting earthquakes, etc. Many entries belong in the margins of history, but you'll wonder how many might yet change our future.

I was really sorry when I finished this book, but by Googling I learned that Mark Pilkington is the "Fortean" behind the "Strange Attractor Journal" . He also runs the Strange Attractor Press. His writings, thank goodness, are still available online.

The "New Scientist" concluded that this book "is not a record of failure, though, more a celebration of science's dreamers." These are dreams that enchanted me, and I'm sure they will enchant you as well.

Robert C. Ross
  A Great Book That Is Also Beautifully Designed ( deathtospammers )
OK, so I'm not exactly unbiased on this one because I loved the articles that author Mark Pilkington wrote for The Guardian newspaper in England and spent about three years convincing him to compile them in book form. But that said, the book is so much better than reading the articles in the paper because now they're expanded, illustrated and best of all ordered in a hilarious and informative way.

You also have to check out the incredible design. The neon green second color used in the book is a beautiful thing!

Oh, and it's under 10 bucks!