4 Books of non-scientific books recommended in June

4 Books of non-scientific books recommended in June

See 4 scientific American books dear to read June

Here’s a collection of exclusive book recommendations, from snakes snakes on the effect of a river, for your summer reading lists

Malte Mueller / Getty Images

Summer reading is a tradition honored on time. The diving experience of an attractive thriller or a new spicy romance is loved by many readers throughout life. But what is for curious, scientific readers trying to enjoy? There are new books this year about all kinds of science topics, such as science taught us about nature, and even intimidation in nature, and even intimidating streams, and even forgiveness, even the intimidation, even the fear, though blasphemy, the power, power and importance of the rivers.

Below is a collection of exclusive book reviews from the current Science Newsletter for those who seek to know something new while relaxing in the pool this summer. Every Friday this summer, we’ll give you a recommended reading to bring to the pool, at the airport or just on your balcony.

Book Cover for Chamor: How the noise gets in the world - and how can we get it, by Chris Berdik

In support of science journalism

If you enjoy this article, think about supporting our winning journalism in Subscribe. By purchasing a subscription you helped to ensure the future of influential stories about the discoveries and ideas that make our world today.


Strength: How the noise gets in the world and how can we get it back

by Chris Berdik

WW Norton, 2025

Sometimes the lights are so bright, there’s a lot of noise, and it’s all the way disturbing. Conservationists surrounded this particular blow of a “sensory smog,” and it occurred to more people informing mechanic, loudly and groove all day. on Awake, Science Chris Berdik reporters travel the sound of our lives, seeking a wide lens what the sounds are, how they affect our future future. The most recent research shows that years of hearing the hearing can resist the quieter tones, such as Purr in a cat that prompts your lap. Animals can tell the world around their surroundings. Between man-made man-made water from shipment and seabed exploration ships, whales as behaved like people in a strong rod together, or less disturbing. We have to protect our own eardrums, yes, but “many noitory stores at heart rates and also almost all generations and almost all life on this planet. –Brianne Kane

SLACT OF THE BOOK FOR THE SLIMS: How most of the nature of nature brings our world, by Stephen S. Hall

Lost: How the most generous creatures of nature shone in our world

by Stephen S. Hall.

Grand Central Publishing, April, 2025

The snakes crawl in most people: they disappear and no more visible, hiding in shocked places and sometimes harmful to the unconscious victims. But the writer of Science Stephen S. Hall, whose newest book is called Lost, a lifetime snake admirer. For him, the snakes are more than mocking. They are unbelievably different and capable of living on every continent other than Antarctica, the Hall said to our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast on our podcast Podcast in our podcast Science easy. Snare ability to survive in different situations that get his attention, “not because of the discretion of evolution or the process selected, but also, it is a warning to us in terms of climate change and changes to changes in (changes) that we do not have, and we may learn something from them. “Snakes can also directly influence human evolution, he added.” The theory of removing the snake helped serpent snakes in snakes. Check the entire interview here. –Btana

The book cover for everyone is Tuberculosis by John Green

All is tuberculosis: History and maintenance of our most fatal infections

By John Green

Crashing on course books, March 2025

Tuberculosis (TB) thousands of years of age and has been healed since the 1950s. However, globally, about 10 million people contracted each year, and about 1.25 million were killed in pain. TB is a bacterial infection. We have good antibiotics to fight with it, thanks for the part of A forgotten group of black nurse on the state islandtaking care of TB patients in the early 20th century and participated in drug tests: the nurses suited to patients, which is important for the development of a drug. In his newest book, Everything is tuberculosis, The writer John Green argues that TB is more than modern-day crisis. He followed the case with a boy with TB in Sierra Leone whose years of struggle became a symbol of how diseased poverty and unacceptable societies. “We don’t live our promise that all people have become equal. And that’s why we have tuberculosis,” he said to a Talk to our podcast Science easy. –Btana

Is a river alive? By Robert Macfarlane Book Cover

Is a river alive?

by Robert Macfarlane

WW Norton, May 2025

In 2008 Ecuador was shocked at the world. Articles 71 to 74 in the country previously newly-professional constitution stated that nature has RIGHTS-Right respect for its existence and the important, life-threatening service provided it and rights to be restored when damaged. In addition, the government has been proven to intervene if human activities can destroy endless rights. In his newest book, A river alive? Macfarlane traveled to three different streams (in Ecuador, India and Quebec) to examine the question of sovereignty in a river. He discovered that streams created interconnected (and frequent weak) worlds of plants and animal plants – which ran they were the flow of life around the world. Today streams fight for their lives as corporations, governments, climate change and change violates their flow flow. “The muscular, deliberate, worshiped and tortured, the streams have long existed in the door space between geology and theology,” wrote Macfarlane. “Rivers are found presidents with great minds of different. We never think like a river, but we might think about them.” –Andrea Gawrylewski

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *