Rosalind Franklin and DNA
Rosalind Franklin and DNA
Editorial Reviews
Newsweek
Anyone who read The Double Helix owes it to Franklin to read her story too.
Book Description
Rosalind Franklin's research was central to the Nobel Prize-winning discovery of DNA's double-helix structure. Known only as the bossy, unfeminine "Rosy" in James Watson's The Double Helix, Franklin never received the credit she was due during her lifetime. In this classic work Anne Sayre sets the record straight.
Rosalind Franklin and DNA
Rosalind Franklin and DNA,Anne Sayre,Anne Sayre,W. W. Norton & Company,0393320448,Biography & Autobiography,Biography/Autobiography,General,History,Life Sciences - Genetics & Genomics,Science,Scientists - General,Biography: general,DNA,Popular science
Discount Books:
- Science and Method
- Science Book
- Science Instruction in the Middle and Secondary Schools (5th Edition)
- Science of Mind
- Serious Adverse Events : An Uncensored History of AIDS
- Sleep (Scientific American Library)
- Stephen Hawking : A Biography (Greenwood Biographies)
- Strategic Choices in Science and Technology : Korea in the Era of a Rising China
- The Cambridge Companion to British Romanticism (Cambridge Companions to Literature)
- The Complete Idiot's Guide to Understanding Cloning
Discount Books
Recommended Books
- Designing Exhibitions
- Authority Rpg: Role-Plalying Game and Resource book
- The Art of Tim Burton's "Sleepy Hollow"
- The Mutual Fund Business
- The Best 100 Web Sites for HR Professionals
- Star Ware: The Amateur Astronomer's Ultimate Guide to Choosing, Buying, & Using Telescopes and A
- Reaction Kinetics and the Development of Catalytic Processes
- The Analytical Theory of Heat
- The School of Whoredom
- The Good News Eating Plan for Type II Diabetes
- The Bare Truth: Stars of Burlesque From the '40s and '50s
- The Gardener's Iris Book
- The Imperial War Museum Book of the War in Burma 1942-1945
- Spectroscopy for Surface Science
- The Art of Trolling: A Complete Guide to Freshwater Methods and Tackle