Lifes Greatest Secret, Matthew Cobb
Lifes Greatest Secret, Matthew Cobb
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Life's Greatest Secret
The Race to Crack the Genetic Code

Author: Matthew Cobb

Narrator: John Lee

Unabridged: 11 hr 59 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 08/11/2015


Synopsis

Everyone has heard of the story of DNA as the story of Watson and Crick and Rosalind Franklin, but knowing the structure of DNA was only a part of a greater struggle to understand life's secrets. Life's Greatest Secret is the story of the discovery and cracking of the genetic code, the thing that ultimately enables a spiraling molecule to give rise to the life that exists all around us. This great scientific breakthrough has had far-reaching consequences for how we understand ourselves and our place in the natural world, and for how we might take control of our (and life's) future.

Life's Greatest Secret mixes remarkable insights, theoretical dead-ends, and ingenious experiments with the swift pace of a thriller. From New York to Paris, Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Cambridge, England, and London to Moscow, the greatest discovery of twentieth-century biology was truly a global feat. Biologist and historian of science Matthew Cobb gives the full and rich account of the cooperation and competition between the eccentric characters who contributed to this revolutionary new science. And, while every new discovery was a leap forward for science, Cobb shows how every new answer inevitably led to new questions that were at least as difficult to answer. But the setbacks and unexpected discoveries are what make the science exciting. This is a riveting story of humans exploring what it is that makes us human and how the world works.

About Matthew Cobb

Matthew Cobb is the author of several books, including The Resistance: The French Fight Against the Nazis, The Egg & Sperm Race: The Seventeenth Century Scientists who Unraveled the Secrets of Sex, Life, and Growth, and Eleven Days in August: The Liberation of Paris, August 1944. He is also the translator of Michel Morange's History of Molecular Biology. He is a professor of zoology at the University of Manchester, where he works on insects and on the history of science. Matthew lives in Manchester, England.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Morgan on June 13, 2021

Matthew Cobb’s historical account of the effort to identify and understand the nature and mechanisms of what we now refer to as the “genetic code”. This history begins with some of the earliest musings on hereditary transmission, to the 19th century discoveries of DNA, on to Watson and Crick’s discov......more

Goodreads review by Tate on September 09, 2015

Assumes a certain level of knowledge of genetics; that being said it is one of the best histories of the subject that I have read. The first 2/3 of the book cover the period from the rediscovery of Mendel in 1900 to the discovery of the 20th/ last amino acid's DNA code in 1966. The last 1/3 of the b......more

Goodreads review by na7la on April 13, 2020

The ultimate reverse engineering ever !!!!......more

Goodreads review by maja reads on December 30, 2023

as a general history of "the race to crack the genetic code", i much preferred siddhartha mukherjee's the gene--thought it was both more interesting in style and richer in content. however, i really enjoyed the interdisciplinary nature of cobb's telling, and the way he weaves in the importance of ma......more

Goodreads review by Jeffrey on August 01, 2015

A history of our understanding of DNA and molecular genetics from the 1940s onward as told by a working geneticist. Although the book is a bit technical at times and assumes knowledge of college-level biology, it's a very good review of a subject that will grow increasingly important in the future.......more