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Granta 16: Science

For the last thirty or forty years, it has been a commonplace that science and literature don’t mix. But recently science writing has undergone a revival and has come to constitute a literature in itself. What accounts for its sudden appeal? The attraction of facts? Or the possibility that ‘facts’ are themselves inventions of the most spectacular kind?

This issue is devoted to representing part of this revival. In ‘Excess’, Oliver Sacks describes individuals suffering from not only too much personality but too many. In ‘Amazon’, Eugene Richards and Dorothea Lynch document the terrible mystery of illness and the body. The sexuality of tortoises, the lunacy of invention, the bizarre mating habits of a tropical rodent, the zoo-like existence of the young scientists of Reagan’s Star Wars – all invite us to understand ‘science’ not simply as the study of fact but also as another way, not unlike the novel, of describing the mystery of the world.

Also in this issue: ‘Fiction and the Bomb’, Tim O’Brien, Mary Gordon, David Mamet, Germaine Greer, David Hare, Ryszard Kapuściński and John Berger.

‘Granta has emerged as Britain’s premier literary magazine, and mainly because it is for writers and readers not academics and critics.’ John Fowles

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Oliver Sacks: Excesses
Oliver Sacks: A Matter of Identity
Oliver Sacks: The Possessed
Eugene Richards: Amazon
Thomas McMahon: Bell and Langley
Italo Calvino: The Loves of the Tortoises
Italo Calvino: The Blackbird's Whistle
Lewis Thomas: Co-operation for the Birds
William Broad: The Scientists of Star Wars
Primo Levi: Children of the Wind
Primo Levi: Self-Control
Primo Levi: Chromium
Stephen Jay Gould: Adam's Navel
Stephen Jay Gould: Fiction and the Bomb
Thomas McMahon: Quantum Jumps
Mary Gordon: The Imagination of Disaster
David Mamet: The Bridge
Darryl Pinckney: England, Whose England?
Ryszard Kapuscinski: Warsaw Diary: (Part 2: 1983)
Germaine Greer: Women and Power in Cuba
David Hare: Nicaragua: An Appeal
Christopher Hitchens: Nicaragua