The Genesis Quest by Michael Marshall
"A dazzling intellectual journey" - Oren Harman
"A fascinating and challenging story" - Tim Flannery
"Incredibly absorbing and insightful" - Mark Miodownik
"A fascinating and challenging story" - Tim Flannery
"Incredibly absorbing and insightful" - Mark Miodownik
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The Genesis Quest is my first book. It tells the story of the century-long scientific effort to understand how life began on Earth.
What happened over 3.5 billion years ago to turn a dead ball of wet volcanic rock into a thriving biosphere? What did the first living thing look like, what was it made of, and how did it form?
Beginning in the 1920s in Soviet Russia, a small band of scientists has tried to figure out what happened. But from the 1960s onwards they have been riven by doubt and furious argument, because life is so complicated that it has proved incredibly difficult to imagine how it could have got started. It's only now, almost 100 years after the first serious hypothesis was put forward, that we're starting to see a way past this impasse.
The story is both a scientific puzzle and a human story about ingenuity, rivalry, and staggering levels of bloody-mindedness. It has explosions, totalitarian governments, voyages to the bottom of the sea and bizarre life forms.
The book is out now in the UK and US. The UK publishers are Weidenfeld & Nicolson (part of the Orion Publishing Group) and the US publishers are the University of Chicago Press. My agent is Peter Tallack of Science Factory.
What happened over 3.5 billion years ago to turn a dead ball of wet volcanic rock into a thriving biosphere? What did the first living thing look like, what was it made of, and how did it form?
Beginning in the 1920s in Soviet Russia, a small band of scientists has tried to figure out what happened. But from the 1960s onwards they have been riven by doubt and furious argument, because life is so complicated that it has proved incredibly difficult to imagine how it could have got started. It's only now, almost 100 years after the first serious hypothesis was put forward, that we're starting to see a way past this impasse.
The story is both a scientific puzzle and a human story about ingenuity, rivalry, and staggering levels of bloody-mindedness. It has explosions, totalitarian governments, voyages to the bottom of the sea and bizarre life forms.
The book is out now in the UK and US. The UK publishers are Weidenfeld & Nicolson (part of the Orion Publishing Group) and the US publishers are the University of Chicago Press. My agent is Peter Tallack of Science Factory.
UK readers: order The Genesis Quest from these outlets:
US readers: order The Genesis Quest from these outlets
Reviews
"This is an incredibly absorbing and insightful book about the most important scientific question of our age." Mark Miodownik, Professor of Materials & Society at University College London and author of Stuff Matters
"Given that I have recently been reading a fair bit about astrobiology and the origin of life, this is the book I wish I had read first... It gets my unreserved recommendation." Leon Vlieger, The Inquisitive Biologist
"Marshall has rounded up all the past and current thinking about this profound and puzzling question – how did life begin? – into a neat, enthralling and highly digestible package. He doesn't pretend we can answer the question, but does justice to all the key proposals so far. And if anything, his survey of potential solutions makes the appearance of life on Earth seem all the more astonishing as we examine the issue ever more closely." Philip Ball, author of How To Grow a Human
"Prepare yourself for a dazzling intellectual journey: the science is fascinating, the cast of characters all-too-human, and the philosophical insights deep. Written in clear and entertaining prose, like a Sherlock Holmes story, this is the best book I know for general readers about the quest to solve one of our most enduring mysteries: how and where, in a seemingly purposeless universe, life began on planet earth." Oren Harman, coeditor of Dreamers, Visionaries, and Revolutionaries in the Life Sciences and Outsider Scientists: Routes to Innovation in Biology
"The Genesis Quest recounts remarkable episodes in the history of attempts to scientifically understand the origin of life. Combining exceptionally clear expositions of what is scientifically at stake, distinctive humor, and a roving eye for the telling anecdote, this is anything but a tedious scientific genealogy. Marshall has a flair and talent for explaining each individual experiment and its intellectual context. The Genesis Quest offers a well-done romp through some fascinating and complicated terrain." Luis A. Campos of the University of New Mexico, author of Radium and the Secret of Life
"The whole is written with wonderful clarity, occasional moments (especially in the footnotes) of nimble wit, and above all without cutting corners or skimming past any of its rich and fascinating narrative. ... Very highly recommended." Adam Roberts, author of Purgatory Mount and many other novels.
"'Genesis Quest' is in fact a fast paced, very enjoyable overview of one of the most important scientific endeavors of all time. I cannot recommend it enough to anyone who is interested in how science and scientists work." Robert A. Lawler, Scienceandsf blog
"The Genesis Quest is a tour-de-force recount of the eclectic effort to understand the origins of life on Earth." Janie Kim, Small Things Considered (American Society for Microbiology)
"This book is an extremely stimulating read and I recommend it most strongly to scientists and laymen alike." Jim Lynch, The Biologist
"It’s a fascinating and challenging story, and leavened with mini-biographies, the best of which are based on his own interviews with his subjects." Tim Flannery, The New York Review of Books
"This is an incredibly absorbing and insightful book about the most important scientific question of our age." Mark Miodownik, Professor of Materials & Society at University College London and author of Stuff Matters
"Given that I have recently been reading a fair bit about astrobiology and the origin of life, this is the book I wish I had read first... It gets my unreserved recommendation." Leon Vlieger, The Inquisitive Biologist
"Marshall has rounded up all the past and current thinking about this profound and puzzling question – how did life begin? – into a neat, enthralling and highly digestible package. He doesn't pretend we can answer the question, but does justice to all the key proposals so far. And if anything, his survey of potential solutions makes the appearance of life on Earth seem all the more astonishing as we examine the issue ever more closely." Philip Ball, author of How To Grow a Human
"Prepare yourself for a dazzling intellectual journey: the science is fascinating, the cast of characters all-too-human, and the philosophical insights deep. Written in clear and entertaining prose, like a Sherlock Holmes story, this is the best book I know for general readers about the quest to solve one of our most enduring mysteries: how and where, in a seemingly purposeless universe, life began on planet earth." Oren Harman, coeditor of Dreamers, Visionaries, and Revolutionaries in the Life Sciences and Outsider Scientists: Routes to Innovation in Biology
"The Genesis Quest recounts remarkable episodes in the history of attempts to scientifically understand the origin of life. Combining exceptionally clear expositions of what is scientifically at stake, distinctive humor, and a roving eye for the telling anecdote, this is anything but a tedious scientific genealogy. Marshall has a flair and talent for explaining each individual experiment and its intellectual context. The Genesis Quest offers a well-done romp through some fascinating and complicated terrain." Luis A. Campos of the University of New Mexico, author of Radium and the Secret of Life
"The whole is written with wonderful clarity, occasional moments (especially in the footnotes) of nimble wit, and above all without cutting corners or skimming past any of its rich and fascinating narrative. ... Very highly recommended." Adam Roberts, author of Purgatory Mount and many other novels.
"'Genesis Quest' is in fact a fast paced, very enjoyable overview of one of the most important scientific endeavors of all time. I cannot recommend it enough to anyone who is interested in how science and scientists work." Robert A. Lawler, Scienceandsf blog
"The Genesis Quest is a tour-de-force recount of the eclectic effort to understand the origins of life on Earth." Janie Kim, Small Things Considered (American Society for Microbiology)
"This book is an extremely stimulating read and I recommend it most strongly to scientists and laymen alike." Jim Lynch, The Biologist
"It’s a fascinating and challenging story, and leavened with mini-biographies, the best of which are based on his own interviews with his subjects." Tim Flannery, The New York Review of Books
Awards
Longlisted for the 2021 Hughes Prize, organised by the British Society for the History of Science
Longlisted for the 2021 Hughes Prize, organised by the British Society for the History of Science