Incoming Resources
- Science news, 2023
- How to speak science, gravity, relativity, and other ideas that were crazy until proven brilliant, Bruce Benamran ; translated by Stephanie Delozier Strobel
- Making the monster, the science behind Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Kathryn Harkup
- The magic of reality, how we know what's really true, Richard Dawkins ; illustrated by Dave McKean
- A short history of nearly everything, Bill Bryson
- Planck, driven by vision, broken by war, Brandon R. Brown
- The magic school bus, Fullscreen
- Vivi loves science, sink or float, Kimberly Derting, Shelli R. Johannes ; illustrated by Joelle Murray
- Lost science, astonishing tales of forgotten genius, Kitty Ferguson
- Great thinkers of the Western world, the major ideas and classic works of more than 100 outstanding Western philosophers, physical and social scientists, psychologists, religious writers, and theologians, edited by Ian P. McGreal
- ASAP science, answers to the world's weirdest questions, most persistent rumors, and unexplained phenomena, Mitch Moffit and Greg Brown ; illustrations by Greg Brown, Jessica Carroll, and Mitchell Moffit
- Illustrated elementary science dictionary, Sarah Khan and Dr. Lisa Jane Gillespie ; designed by Michael Hill and Joanne Kirkby ; edited by Kirsteen Rogers ; illustrated by Lizzie Barber
- The end of Eden, wild nature in the age of climate breakdown, Adam Welz
- Letters to a young scientist, Edward O. Wilson
- Why?, the best ever question and answer book about nature, science and the world around you, by Catherine Ripley ; illustrated by Scot Ritchie
- When Einstein walked with Gödel, excursions to the edge of thought, Jim Holt
- The Oxford illustrated history of science, edited by Iwan Rhys Morus
- The upright thinkers, the human journey from living in trees to understanding the cosmos, Leonard Mlodinow
- A naturalist at large, the best essays of Bernd Heinrich, Bernd Heinrich
- Of ice and men, how we've used cold to transform humanity, Fred Hogge
- The sun, by Martha E.H. Rustad
- Turning points, how critical events have driven human evolution, life, and development, Kostas Kampourakis
- At least know this, essential science to enhance your life, by Guy P. Harrison
- Science and the ske?tic, discerning fact from fiction, Marc Zimmer
- American eclipse, a nation's epic race to catch the shadow of the moon and win the glory of the world, David Baron
- Views of nature, Alexander von Humboldt ; translated by Mark W. Person ; edited by Stephen T. Jackson and Laura Dassow Walls
- The cat in the box, a history of science in 100 experiments, Mary Gribbin and John Gribbin
- How to take over the world, practical schemes and scientific solutions for the aspiring supervillain, Ryan North ; illustrated by Carly Monardo
- How science works, the facts visually explained, contributors: Derek Harvey and four others
- Bomb, the race to build - and steal - the world's most dangerous weapon, Steve Sheinkin
- Earth, by Martha E.H. Rustad
- How it all works, all scientific laws and phenomena illustrated & demonstrated, [illustrated by] Adam Dant & [written by] Brian Clegg
- The moon, by Martha E.H. Rustad
- Clockwork futures, the science of steampunk and the reinvention of the modern world, Brandy Schillace
- Timelines of science
- Scientifically thinking, how to liberate your mind, solve the world's problems, and embrace the beauty of science, Stanley A. Rice ; cartoons by Leslie Gregersen
- Science news, 2024
- A magical world, superstition and science from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment, Derek K. Wilson
- The best American science and nature writing 2023, edited by Carl Zimmer, Jaime Green
- Reading the rocks, how Victorian geologists discovered the secret of life, Brenda Maddox
- The Usborne illustrated dictionary of science, Corinne Stockley, Chris Oxlade, and Jane Wertheim ; revision editor, Kirsteen Rogers ; designers, Karen Tomlins and Verinder Bhachu ; digital illustrator, Fiona Johnson ; illustrators, Kuo Kang Chen and Guy Smith
- How to love the universe, a scientist's odes to the hidden beauty behind the visible world, Stefan Klein