Nose Dive
A Field Guide to the World's Smells
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
September 15, 2020
The ultimate obsessive's guide to all things olfactory. If you've ever been curious as to why cat urine is so potent, why feet stink, or, more pleasantly, why flowers smell so lovely, then this is the tome for you. McGee, who has written multiple books about the science of cooking and displays an encyclopedic knowledge of the "wide world of smells," invites readers to become "smell explorers." The author seems equally fascinated by the smells of flowers, trees, plants, and other organisms as well as some of the foulest funks out there (human excrement, dead flesh). "Despite its longtime reputation as one of the lowest of human faculties," he writes, "smell clearly has the power to engage us with the world around us, to reveal invisible, intangible details of that world, to stimulate intense feeling and thought: to nudge us into being as fully and humanly alive as we can be." Throughout, McGee dives deep into the science and taxonomy of smells, and he augments the text with plentiful charts that provide visual demonstration of his discussions. As he reiterates continually across more than 600 dense pages, things smell the way they do thanks to specific combinations of microbes, molecules, and biological processes. Although the text is rigorous and likely too scholarly for some readers, McGee has a genial way with words that makes the hard science accessible to motivated general readers. Unfortunately, in his effort to be inviting, he makes excessive use of exclamation points (more than 200). For example: "So it's ironic that they're all such valued ingredients in the foods of people all over the world!" It's difficult to say how many readers McGee will transform into bona fide "smell explorers," but you have to give him credit: This is a unique project executed meticulously from beginning to end. The book's ability to reach beyond a niche audience, however, remains uncertain. Equips readers with all the science necessary for a life of heightened smell perception.
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October 1, 2020
Award-winning science writer McGee (On Food and Cooking) offers an exhaustive compendium on odors and their chemical makeup. He begins by explaining that chemical volatiles that drift from their sources provide us with these smells, what he calls the osmocosm. Those chemicals began in space before earth existed. He grounds his study in the original chemicals, the building blocks, which serve as ingredients for all odors, and explains how our brains perceive them. Jumping off from this foundation, he devotes sections of the book to the specific odors emanating from animals, from plants, and from the stuff of earth itself (the waters, land, and gases). His concluding section includes chapters on perfumes, on the varied aromas of cooked foods, and on cured and fermented foods. In every chapter, numerous tables note the item, its smell, and its chemical composition. He often makes interesting connections between odors that exist in widely different and unexpected places. The reader may wish to dip in and out of this exceedingly thorough book, following their fancy. VERDICT Perfect for foodies, those interested in science, and the innately curious. Engagingly written, this would be a wonderful ready reference to have on hand.--Caren Nichter, Univ. of Tennessee at Martin
Copyright 2020 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
October 15, 2020
Of all the human senses, smell is perhaps the least appreciated, even when its major role in tasting is acknowledged. In his detailed survey of scents, food writer and cooking scientist McGee elegantly explains olfaction. "When we smell something, it's because particles of that thing?its vaporized, airborne, volatile molecules?enter us and momentarily become part of us." His exploration of our smelly world includes the odors of flora and fauna, soil and smoke, food and fragrances, but also the unexpected: primordial earth, rain, and the whiff of old books. Pungent and even rancid smells?skunk spray, ammonia, manure?are as respected as such delectable aromas as lemon, coffee, and rosemary. Odiferous facts abound. A section on the human body is notable, with a scent "recipe" for underarm sweat (vinegar, cheese, mushroom, onion, meat, grapefruit, metal, rancid goat). More pleasantly, the fallen leaves of the Asian katsura tree have the scent of cotton candy, cake, and caramel. Numerous tables summarize the molecular composition and source of odors of selected entities. Even with helpings of organic chemistry, this is a delightful outing across the olfactory world.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)
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