Destroyer of Worlds
The Deep History of the Nuclear Age: 1895-1965
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Penguin Books Ltd
Publishing:6th Aug '26
£12.99
This title is due to be published on 6th August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£25.00(9780241700860)

Henry Becquerel’s accidental discovery, in Paris in 1896, of a faint smudge on a photographic plate sparked a chain of discoveries which would unleash the atomic age. Destroyer of Worlds is the story of how pursuit of this hidden source of nuclear power, which began innocently and collaboratively, was overwhelmed by the politics of the 1930s, and following devastation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki opened the way to a still more terrible possibility: a thermonuclear bomb, the so-called “backyard weapon”, that could destroy all life on earth – from anywhere.
Spanning decades and continents, the story moves from Becquerel to Ernest Rutherford, Enrico Fermi, Otto Hahn, Lise Meitner and the Joliot-Curies, and on to the appearance of Robert Oppenheimer before climaxing with increasingly horrifying developments in the USA and USSR. It re-evaluates the important role played by three remarkable women – Lise Meitner, Ida Noddack and Irene Curie – and provides new insights into the work of Ettore Majorana, who mysteriously disappeared in 1938.
This is the remarkable story of how knowledge is often advanced by personal convictions and relationships, an indeed by chance.
Stirring ... Close's ensemble drama is a powerful corrective to the myth of the solitary genius. An eminent theoretical physicist, he walks us step-by-step through what he calls the 'Third Industrial Revolution', [shining] a light on the bustling cast of scientists whose 50-year pursuit of knowledge led ineluctably to the atomic bomb. The depth of Close's knowledge throws up surprises even if you know the territory ... he convenes these fascinating personalities deftly and has an abundant supply of thrills, tragedies and gratifying trivia * Spectator *
Close writes with elegance and lucidity about the resulting experiments and investigations [and] the breakthroughs that led to the atom bomb [so that] the sense of wonderment and awe that drives the quest shines through. Close also turns the spotlight on figures often forgotten, such as Ettore Majorana, a young Sicilian physicist, whom Fermi rated as a genius to rank alongside Newton and who did much to unravel the mysteries of atomic structure * Financial Times *
A magisterial account of an exciting—and often courageous—area of scientific endeavour * Prospect *
ISBN: 9781802066029
Dimensions: 198mm x 129mm x 35mm
Weight: 500g
336 pages