
A Selection Of Novels For Science Lovers



The Sherlock Holmes stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
The canonical Sherlock Holmes store consists of four novels and fifty-six short stories. The titular character, detective Sherlock Holmes, is an amateur forensic scientist. The techniques he uses to solve crimes are often unrealistic, and forensic techniques have changed quite a bit since they were first published, but Sherlock Holmes’s love of science, and logic, and experimentation, is still infectious.

Sir Fred Hoyle’s work as an astrophysicist ensures that the plot of The Black Cloud, whilst perhaps unlikely, is well-grounded in actual science. The titular cloud is described using physics equations, all of which are included in the book.

This is beloved physicist Carl Sagan’s only novel. In it, humans interact with a more advanced extraterrestrial life form. Pleasingly, the scientist protagonist of the novel is female, her story beginning with her being a child enamoured by science. Carl Sagan also wrote many popular non-fiction books about physics and cosmology including Cosmos, and Pale Blue Dot: A Vision Of The Human Future In Space.
The Time And Space Of Uncle Albert by Russell Stannard
The Time And Space Of Uncle Albert and its sequels Black Holes And Uncle Albert, and Uncle Albert And The Quantum Quest, are novels for children which help explain concepts such as relativity and quantum physics. Uncle Albert is a fictionalised Albert Einstein, who can think so hard that he creates actual thought bubbles that his niece can then enter to explore and experiment with these theoretical concepts.

In The Color Of Distance, the biology of an alien planet is explored with strong environmentalist themes. The intelligent alien lifeforms live in harmony with their environment, and throughout the novel are observed by a genetically modified human scientist.

While these are not novels, The Magic School Bus tales are classic and well-loved stories exploring science in fun ways for children. Each story involves a school trip in an anthropomorphic school bus that takes the children to impossible locations where they then learn about science. These locations include the Solar System, inside the human body, inside a beehive, and prehistoric Earth (to visit dinosaurs).