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Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe Paperback – Illustrated, April 3, 2012

4.8 out of 5 stars 2,865 ratings

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With more than 1 million copies sold worldwide, The Elements is the most entertaining, comprehensive, and visually arresting book on all 118 elements in the periodic table.

Includes a poster of Theodore Gray's iconic photographic periodic table of the elements!

Based on seven years of research and photography by Theodore Gray and Nick Mann,
The Elements presents the most complete and visually arresting representation available to the naked eye of every atom in the universe. Organized sequentially by atomic number, every element is visualized by a big beautiful photograph that most closely represents it in its purest form. Several additional photographs show each element in slightly altered forms or as used in various practical ways. Also included are fascinating stories of the elements, told in Theo Grays inimitable style, as well as data on the properties of each, including atomic number, atomic symbol, atomic weight, density, atomic radius, as well as scales for electron filling order, state of matter, and an atomic emission spectrum.

This work of solid science and stunning artistic photographs is the perfect gift book for every sentient creature in the universe.
 
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Gray's trademark dry wit and historical anecdotes bring even the most basic lumps to life."―Popular Science

"The Elements is a loving reimagination of the classic table."―Wired

"I don't know if this is the first coffee-table book paying lush photographic homage to the periodic table, but it is certainly the most gorgeous one I've seen."―
John Tierney, The New York Times

About the Author

Theodore Gray is the author of The Elements, Molecules, and Reactions, as well as Theodore Gray's Completely Mad Science, How Things Work, Engines, and the forthcoming Tools. He is the creator of the bestselling iPad apps "Elements" and "Molecules," which have both been named "App of the Week" by Apple and was Director of "Disney Animated" (also honored by Apple as "iPad App of the Year"). Gray appeared on stage with Steve Jobs several times in his capacity as a software creator. He also co-founded Wolfram Research, Inc., makers of the widely-used software Mathematica and the Wolfram Alpha website. He lives in Urbana, Illinois.

Nick Mann is a photographer specializing in taking beautiful photos of inanimate objects on black backgrounds. His other work includes Molecules,, Reactions,How Things Work, Engines, and the forthcoming Tools, all written by Theodore Gray. In his other life, he works in the quality and manufacturing department for a small scientific imaging company. He lives with his wife, children, and stepson in Urbana, Illinois.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Black Dog & Leventhal; Illustrated edition (April 3, 2012)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 240 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1579128955
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1579128951
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.2 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 10.13 x 0.75 x 10.13 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.8 out of 5 stars 2,865 ratings

About the author

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Theodore Gray
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Theodore Gray is the author of The Elements, Molecules, Mad Science, Mad Science 2, and Reactions, among various related books, plus the off-topic (but BAFTA award winning) iPad app Disney Animated. He's the co-founder of Wolfram Research (makers of Mathematica and Wolfram|Alpha), founder of Touchpress (publisher of many award-winning iPad and iPhone apps), and an avid robotic quilter. He wrote the Gray Matter column for Popular Science magazine from 1992-2002, and this bio.

Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
2,865 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this book informative and well-written, with clear explanations of complex concepts and beautiful photographs throughout. Moreover, they appreciate its humor and value for money, making it a great gift for students in science. Additionally, the book is suitable for both older kids and adults, with one customer noting its effectiveness as a coffee table book for adults.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

484 customers mention "Information content"454 positive30 negative

Customers find the book informative, teaching cool facts about each element and discussing them with sufficient detail.

"...They're accompanied by wonderful photographs that illustrate the applications of each element, as well as diagrams showing its emission spectrum,..." Read more

"...a picture of himself with a small fraction of his collection, a helpful index, along with a full-color fold-out (actually a removable poster) of..." Read more

"...They are the most basic building blocks of the universe, and Just by adding a proton, an element goes from being relatively safe for human life, to..." Read more

"From first page, the way he teaches gives me a better understanding about basics of the elements than I ever learned in high school or college...." Read more

400 customers mention "Pictures quality"398 positive2 negative

Customers appreciate the stunning photographs in the book, noting that elements are beautifully represented and arranged to be visually appealing.

"...Nick Mann went through the collection to make outstanding, high-quality photographs and compile them into a fantastic book about "everything you can..." Read more

"...he says that "we're ready to start our journey through the wild, beautiful, up-and-down, fun, and terrifying world of the elements."..." Read more

"...The author has amassed quite a collection, and the photos are quite beautiful and detailed...." Read more

"...It beautiful and fantastic price. A very large book yoo." Read more

140 customers mention "Readability"131 positive9 negative

Customers find the book easy to read, with concise text and clear explanations of complex concepts.

"...us non-professionals, he does this is a way that is amusing and understandable...." Read more

"...Gray is light-hearted and approachable for the beginner, while at the same time able to be appreciated by the scientist and advanced technician...." Read more

"...The voice of the print tends to be conversational, and has wonderful comments such as, "[these] are called the alkali metals, and they are all fun..." Read more

"...An easy to read perspective for the average person just wanting to learn the basic language of elements...." Read more

95 customers mention "Humor"95 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book's humor, finding it surprisingly funny and entertaining, with one customer noting how the humorous descriptions capture their 7-year-old's interest.

"...Fortunately for us non-professionals, he does this is a way that is amusing and understandable...." Read more

"...Mr. Gray's writing is brilliantly entertaining. The 240 or so pages are for repeated hours of turning, seeing, and reading. Enjoy. Five stars." Read more

"...The voice of the print tends to be conversational, and has wonderful comments such as, "[these] are called the alkali metals, and they are all fun..." Read more

"...Much of the discussion on each Element is anecdotal and somewhat humorous...." Read more

86 customers mention "Knowledge of the periodic table"82 positive4 negative

Customers appreciate the book's coverage of the periodic table, noting its nice breakdown in layout and how each element appears.

"...each element, as well as diagrams showing its emission spectrum, crystal structure, and other information that you may or may not be interested in...." Read more

"...odd-numbered pages have in each instance more color photos, interesting write-ups, and technical details...." Read more

"...I love the idea of the book itself, and having a consolidated periodic table of the elements in book form with photos of the available real-life..." Read more

"...This is more of a coffee table book than an ultimate reference to the Periodic Table of Elements...." Read more

57 customers mention "Value for money"57 positive0 negative

Customers find the book to be worth the price, with one mentioning it's worth it for the pictures alone.

"...It cost a whole lot less than a 1/10 troy ounce Rhodium coin..." Read more

"...It beautiful and fantastic price. A very large book yoo." Read more

"...Beautifully put togethet and informative while humerously written. Great find, Now I'll have to order Molecules by the same author." Read more

"...All in all this was a worthwhile purchase and one that should come in handy from time to time. Last Ranger" Read more

20 customers mention "Gift value"20 positive0 negative

Customers find the book makes a great gift, particularly for students in science, with one mentioning it was purchased for a chemistry-minded grandson.

"...It ended up being an unexpected birthday gift, and with the Christmas season approaching, it could just be a gift you are looking for...." Read more

"...A GREAT gift for a kid who you're looking to inspire with the sciences or an adult who's into interesting factoid type books!..." Read more

"...Great gift for the nerd in your family." Read more

"...This would actually be such a great gift for anyone that loves science, even kids..." Read more

15 customers mention "Age range"15 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate that the book is suitable for older kids and adults, with one customer noting it makes a perfect coffee table book for adults.

"This book is certainly appropriate for the mainstream audience, it is mostly a discussion of the real world applications of the elements and the..." Read more

"...Though it is clearly written as an adult book, it is equally valuabel and interesting for a child or adult." Read more

"...Fantastic for adults and science/system-memorizing/curious-minded children." Read more

"Very nice. I would buy again. Good for kids and adults. Not something you read everyday, but certainly is useful...." Read more

No glossary or Melocular models of elements
5 out of 5 stars
No glossary or Melocular models of elements
Great pictures of elements, but no atomic structure. Not having a glossary means you have to go through whole book to look for 1 element. Shows electron filling order, the natural crystalline structure of the element in nature as 3-D picture, and where it is on Periodic Table. I bought these to go with a molecular modeling kit. It is wonderful in showing the elements as unique entities and what they are used for. The molecule book had molecular structures and is the perfect companion to this book. It goes in depth to compare the different molecul structures.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 1, 2011
    When I was a kid, my father had the entire Time/Life science series. For you young whippersnappers, Time/Life books were educational series that covered all kinds of topics - history, science, literature, you name it. The idea was that you sign up and they send you books, once a month, until the series was finished or you decided you no longer wanted to receive it.

    The Science series focused on, of course, science, with books devoted to every facet of physics, medicine, chemistry, biology.... It was a fantastic compendium of human knowledge in those pre-internet days, and I just loved it. I learned about how traveling at lightspeed squashes things by reading a story about spies chasing each other on the Lightspeed Express. I learned about how different drugs affect the mind and body. I learned about how important the wheel was, what water could do, and how the food we eat determines almost everything about our lives.

    My favorite volume of all of them was titled Matter, and it was about all the stuff there is. At the center of it was a pictorial representation of all the elements known to science in 1968. Everything from Hydrogen to Uranium and beyond. I could pore over those pages for hours, amazed by the idea that these things were all there was, made up everything around me. Learning that just six of them (Oxygen, Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Calcium and Phosphorus) made up most of, well, me was just mind-bending.

    I don't know where that book is now - probably in a box at my mother's house - but the effect that it had on me has lasted ever since my childhood. In fact, as I was researching this review, I found the place that sells coins stamped from elemental metals and got completely distracted by the struggle to not buy any of them. So that's how Time/Life made me into a science nerd. Nevertheless, I was thrilled when I saw this book, and had to snap it up as soon as I could. It cost a whole lot less than a 1/10 troy ounce Rhodium coin

    Theodore Gray is an element hunter - something I didn't even know existed when I was a kid. He has made a hobby of trying to collect samples of every element that is is possible to (legally) own, and he's even built a special table to hold them all. A periodic table, as it were, which won him the IgNobel Prize in Chemistry in 2002. He and Nick Mann went through the collection to make outstanding, high-quality photographs and compile them into a fantastic book about "everything you can drop on your foot."

    It starts, of course, with a basic rundown of what an element is - a substance made of only one type of atom - and what the Periodic Table is - an organization of the elements by their common properties. There's also a page explaining the physics behind the shape of the table, what an "electron filling order" is, and why the atomic emission spectrum is so important. Fortunately for us non-professionals, he does this is a way that is amusing and understandable. Gray knows that his audience isn't professional chemists or grad students - it's people like me. People who are fans of science, but who, for one reason or another, never got into the real nitty-gritty of it. All of this means that it's a book you can enjoy even if you remember nothing from high school chemistry other than "BIFF=WANG." [1]

    The book starts, of course, at hydrogen, the element that makes the sun burn ("Even at night," alleges the author, but I'll believe that when I see it) and ends with Ununoctium, which will no doubt get a proper name once those crazy kids in the high-energy physics lab get around to assembling it. It includes the spectre of the modern age, Uranium, and its evil twin Plutonium. There's Carbon, without which none of us would be here, and Arsenic, which does a fine job of seeing to it that we cease to be. There's Iron, which we use in abundance, and Dysprosium, which has almost no uses that you've ever heard of. Cesium tells us what time it is, and Krypton, which used to tell us how long things were (before we figured out the speed of light.) Strontium and Calcium, Sodium and Americium, Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead - every element is in here, waiting for you.

    They're accompanied by wonderful photographs that illustrate the applications of each element, as well as diagrams showing its emission spectrum, crystal structure, and other information that you may or may not be interested in. Regardless of how much you know about chemistry, you should find this to be a fascinating and enjoyable book. Moreover, if you have kids and you want them to be exposed to science in a way that engages their fascination and imagination, then this is the book for you. Just be ready to raise a science nerd, and if they ask for an elemental coin for their birthday, remember - Lead isn't just for toys anymore!

    -----------------------------------------------------
    "When you throw a large enough lump of sodium into a lake, the result is a huge explosion a few seconds later. Depending on whether you took the right precautions, this is either a thrilling and beautiful experience or the end of your life as you have known it when molten sodium sprays into your eyes, permanently blinding you. Chemistry is a bit like that: powerful enough to do great things in the world, but also dangerous enough to do terrible things just as easily. If you don't respect it, chemistry bites."
    - Theodore Gray, The Elements
    -----------------------------------------------------

    [1] Thanks, Mr. Hiza!
    31 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2010
    Could there be a book whose cover is strikingly more brilliantly colorful than its jacket? "The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe," by Theodore Gray and Nick Mann, is such a book. And the cover is but the beginning, as one shall see.

    Author Gray's epigraph is telling, and very much surprising in that the quotation is by Lucretius, from "De Rerum Natura," in 50 B.C.: "There is not anything which returns to nothing, but all things return dissolved into their elements." And Lucretius couldn't possibly have known even the half of it.

    Gray is light-hearted and approachable for the beginner, while at the same time able to be appreciated by the scientist and advanced technician. The book is good-sized. Right off the bat, Gray likeably says, "If you have a foot, please don't drop this book on it." More seriously, he adds, "This property of indivisibility is what makes an element an element."

    He also presents more serious cautions as to what one might or might not try to do with certain of the elements. You wouldn't want to blow yourself up! He says that chemistry is "powerful enough to do great things in the world, but also dangerous enough to do terrible things just as easily. If you don't respect it, chemistry bites."

    The book shows a sample of successive elements on the even-numbered pages, in beautifully printed 10-inch by 10-inch full-color photographs, against black backgrounds. The facing odd-numbered pages have in each instance more color photos, interesting write-ups, and technical details.

    Since the elements are known in part by their abbreviations, atomic numbers, and places in the Periodic Table, Mr. Gray clearly discusses the Table on his first few pages, explaining the columns, rows, and groupings, before advancing to the left-right pairs of pages devoted to the individual elements. As a preface, he says that "we're ready to start our journey through the wild, beautiful, up-and-down, fun, and terrifying world of the elements."

    He closes the book with words about his joy in collecting elements, a picture of himself with a small fraction of his collection, a helpful index, along with a full-color fold-out (actually a removable poster) of the elements and their photos. Mr. Gray is seated at his Wooden Periodic Table Table (a clever name play), which he himself crafted, since he is also a highly accomplished woodworker. His website gives access to many more photos of his collections and of his woodworking shop and projects. A most interesting fellow.

    Theodore Gray's "The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe" presents the entire Periodic Table. Appropriately enough, it is far pretty enough to find a place on anyone's Coffee Table. Beyond a feast for the eyes, the book is also a feast for the mind. Mr. Gray's writing is brilliantly entertaining. The 240 or so pages are for repeated hours of turning, seeing, and reading. Enjoy. Five stars.
    6 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • A. Wallis
    5.0 out of 5 stars Inspired by mine craft
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 16, 2015
    Great book - very visual and not at all stuffy old school. I bought it for a 9 year old interested in science, who has only been introduced to the periodic table through mine craft. He has started to ask questions about elements and what they are. Wanted to show him that the REAL elements are different and not like the mine craft ones. He is particularly interested in radioactive substances, this book was ideal in explaining what uranium was to satisfy his curiosity. It's a great book to dip in and out of, I wouldn't expect him to read it cover to cover, (although it is under his pillow). There is a double page colourful spread for each element, and the text is very readable. It is ordered in a way sympathetic to the periodic table. I love that practical everyday objects are used to illustrate what the elements are and how we use them in everyday life. Takes you up to secondary level science concepts, but in a way younger children may find interesting. He likes to categorise, order and group things, so this is right up his street. Found it when searching for a periodic table poster on line. Would quite like to get the cards that go with the book, and the poster. Also the book about molecules from the same series. I do think that when kids ask questions about a topic it's fine to give them text that takes them beyond what they may be doing at school. Hopefully it will make chemistry look interesting rather than scary, by the time he reaches secondary school.
  • Rocio
    5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful ilustrations!
    Reviewed in Mexico on January 28, 2021
    Perfect book to get kids curious about learning!
  • Subhasis
    5.0 out of 5 stars Children loved it
    Reviewed in India on September 8, 2023
    Pros: children loved it.
    Cons: this is not the book if you need a ton of information on each element.

    You will find other elements books with more information on the elements. But this one has more attractive pictures, and the author knows how to tell the tale of elements.

    It is for children.
  • Nenad
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
    Reviewed in Germany on November 4, 2023
    Excellent, sehr zufrieden
    Report
  • Nadine
    5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome book
    Reviewed in Australia on August 23, 2024
    Bought Atoms and Molecules (we already have Reactions) for my 9 year old nephew and he loves them. First thing he reads when he's back from school and last thing he reads before bed. Wish Mr Gray would write more! :)