A few events tomorrow and Friday for your infotainment pleasure.
First, I’ll be doing a reading/book talk on The Hunt for Vulcan at Brookline Booksmith, a fine indy bookstore in scenic Coolidge Corner. (279 Harvard St., to be precise). That would be tomorrow, Thursday November 12 at 7 p.m. Books to be signed, of course.
I have to add that Tikka’s grown tired of waiting for his:
For some background on the book and the events that drove me to it, here’s a Boston Globe piece I published a few weeks ago on Einstein’s general relativity at 100; here’s a piece that went up yesterday at The Atlantic‘s joint that gives a taste of the story the book tells; and here’s a piece at Gizmodo that adds a little background into how and why I actually got off my ass and wrote the damn thing. (Spoiler alert: I blame someone often discussed on this site.
Next, in semi-direct competition with my gig at the bookstore…(See! I can rise above shameless self-promotion on rare occasions) my department at MIT is putting on what looks to be a really interesting event: an MIT Communication Forum presentation on “Women in Politics: Representation and Reality”
Think Veep comes to Washington. That’ll take place at 5 p.m., tomorrow, November 12, so I guess if you were a glutton for punishment you could take that one in, dash across the river, and still get in on some planet Vulcan action. Shameless I am. The forum is free and open to the public, and will take place in MIT Building 3, room 270. (That link takes you to the MIT interactive map. Basically Building 3 is the second hallway on your right off the long (Infinite!) corridor that starts at the main entrance to campus at 77 Massachusetts Ave. Go upstairs and wander down — towards the river — till you find room number 270.
Finally, on Friday, November 13, the MIT Program in Science Technology and Society and the Physics Department are hosting a sneak preview of the NOVA film “Inside Einstein’s Mind.”
The screening will be followed by a panel discussion on the film and on the centennial of the discovery of the General Theory of Relativity.
That part of the evening’s festivities will be moderated by your humble blogger and will feature my colleague, physicist and historian of science David Kaiser, joined by two of David’s physics colleagues, Tracy Slayter and Scott Hughes, science writer Amanda Gefter, and NOVA’s Chris Schmidt. It all happens between 7 and 9 p.m., in room 32-123 — which is the big auditorium on the ground floor of the Stata Center, the great big honker of a Gehry building at the intersection of Vasser and Main Streets. Interactive map advice here.
Come to some, come to all, and if you can’t (or won’t) you can still get your hands on the book, online* and/or at the local bookstore I thoroughly encourage you to support — and then watch the film on Wednesday, November 25th at 9 p.m. on PBS (check local listings).
Images: Tikka, of course, photographed by yours truly.
Henry Gillard Glindoni, John Dee performing an experiment before Queen Elizabeth I, by 1913.
Thomas Bartholin, Head transect from Anatome ex omnium veterum recentiorumque observationibus, 1673.
Barnes and Noble/Nook here; iBooks here.
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