"In Destroyer of Worlds, accomplished author Frank Close has written a genuine page-turner. Whisking readers from the fledgling days of radiation physics, in which X-rays and other phenomena defied scientific expectation, to the frightening era of the nuclear arms race, Close offers an epic work of true drama. Delightful anecdotes about the brilliant scientists involved in solving the atomic puzzle make this book a must. In Close’s adept hands, the history of the atomic bomb comes alive."
—Paul Halpern, author of The Allure of the Multiverse
"With his signature scholarship and élan, Frank Close recreates how radioactivity evolved from laboratory curio that inspired whispers of transmutation through an age of innocence about an inexhaustible energy source to the specter of limitless destruction. He deftly portrays how gifted but fallible physicists and chemists worked to complete a dossier of the phenomenon and its implications for our understanding of nature and for the course of human affairs."
—Chris Quigg, co-author of Grace in All Simplicity
"If you enjoyed the movie “Oppenheimer,” you will be thrilled by Frank Close’s Destroyer of Worlds. With a knack for explaining the history of nuclear energy in simple terms, Close takes us to the “rooms where it happened,” revealing the struggles, mistakes, and triumphs that led from the discovery of radioactivity to up to the nuclear age."
—Robert Cahn, co-author of Grace in All Simplicity
"Kinetic, dramatic, and compulsively readable, Destroyer of Worlds follows dozens of astounding scientific discoveries that led to the development of nuclear weapons. In powerful, plain language, Close connects humanity’s unstoppable scientific curiosity to our species’ strange willingness to visit existential threats upon ourselves."
—Patchen Barss, author of The Impossible Man
"Destroyer of Worlds is a cogent, detailed account of one of history's brightest and darkest chapters, in which amazing scientific insights into atoms and their nuclei coincided with fascism and world-wide conflict. Frank Close shows us how the initial dreams of beneficial atomic energy were transmuted, with frightening speed, into nightmares. Amidst our current enthusiasm for artificial intelligence and other game-changing technologies, this book offers us all a stern warning."
—Matt Strassler, author of Waves in an Impossible Sea
"Once again, Frank Close explains sophisticated science in a way that anyone can understand, and tells a gripping story in the process: how a smudge in a photographic plate in March 1896 led, almost inexorably, to the development of the most terrifying weapons of war ever created. Along the way we are introduced to the fascinating characters who propelled this drama, people like Roentgen and Becquerel, Rutherford and the Curies, Bohr and Einstein, Fermi and Szilard, Teller and Oppenheimer, and a host of other geniuses whose scientific curiosity led mankind down a dark path indeed. For those interested in how the quest to understand radioactivity and the atomic nucleus led to the development of the hydrogen bomb, this book is a great place to start."
—David Schwartz, author of The Last Man Who Knew Everything