Book to Note
Matt Ridley, Francis Crick: Discoverer of
the Genetic Code. New
York: HarperCollins, 2006. x + 213
pp. $19.95.
Reviewed by Matthew Soniak
It is no small task to explain a life, let alone the secret of life,
in a few hundred pages, but this slim book does more than that; it may
have gotten to the soul of both. Ridley skillfully traces the separate
paths of the history of modern biology and Francis Crick’s journey
to greatness until the two threads met in 1953 with Crick’s and
Watson’s discovery of DNA’s structure. Ridley brilliantly
captures Crick’s thinking style: his love of debate; his insistence
on written, not remembered, evidence; and his ability to visualize in
three dimensions. The book also discusses the controversial and misunderstood
aspects of Crick’s findings, including allegations of stolen data
and conflicts with Rosalind Franklin and Richard Gregory. Rid ley’s
story is succinct and flowing but is so full of names and
places that it is occasionally difficult to keep track of the narrative;
photographs and an index would have helped. Still, there is much to be
learned about DNA, scientific pursuit, the creative soul of a man, and
the secret of life.
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