Uncle Tungsten

Uncle Tungsten: Memories of a Chemical Boyhood  
Author(s) Oliver Sacks
Cover artist John Gall
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Memoir
Science
Publisher Vintage Books
Publication date 2001
Pages 317
ISBN 0-375-40448-1
OCLC Number 46937635
Dewey Decimal 616.8/092 B 21
LC Classification RC339.52.S23 A3 2001

Uncle Tungsten: Memories of a Chemical Boyhood is a memoir by Oliver Sacks about his childhood published in 2001. The book is named for Sacks's Uncle Dave, owner of a business named Tungstalite, which made incandescent lightbulbs with a tungsten filament, whom Oliver nicknamed Uncle Tungsten. Uncle Tungsten was fascinated with tungsten and believed it was the metal of the future. The book also talks about many other things that happened to Sacks, such as the many whippings at Braefield school, the burning down of the Crystal Palace, his interest in amateur chemistry, and his short-lived obsession with coloring his own black-and-white photographs using dangerous chemicals. It is also an extremely readable primer in the history and science of chemistry.

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