Review by Choice Review
Symmetry was first published in the UK as Finding Moonshine (2008). Here, du Sautoy (Univ. of Oxford) tells of a personal journey about connecting concepts of symmetry to areas of mathematics such as group theory. He looks at a mathematician's strategies in problem solving through the retelling of personal stories and encounters with current famous mathematicians. For example, du Sautoy relates a story in which he is visiting the Alhambra. He explains his quest to find all 17 types of tiling symmetry there and includes very good drawings of some of these tiling symmetries. These are only some of the illustrations included. The book has many pictures/graphs to help the reader visualize the content. The author also presents a historical narrative on the richness of mathematics. In particular, he gives a good background on the history of solving equations, starting with the Babylonians and including the ancient Islamic and Indian contributions. Undergraduates in mathematics may find the personal stories interesting and relative to their journey into the discipline. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates. S. L. Sullivan Catawba College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review
Du Sautoy specializes in symmetry, and that concept is instantly visualized in the tiling of the Moorish Alhambra Palace, which initiates his tour through the history and ideas of his mathematical subject. This accessible introduction makes for a shrewd start, for, as seems congenital with mathematicians and their abstract pursuits, du Sautoy takes symmetry in this work to the nth degree specifically, to the 196,883d dimension. But far from stumping his readers, the author inveigles them with clarity about symmetry's foundational concepts, cast of mathematical heroes, and wry portrayals of the quirky personalities among his contemporary colleagues in group theory, as symmetry is technically called. The package works as well here as in his highly praised The Music of the Primes (2003), with the addition of imparting the personal frisson of making a mathematical discovery. Relating his triumphs, confiding his worry about whether, at age 40, he's still got the creative spark, du Sautoy well demonstrates that whatever discoveries he has yet to make, he's able to engage general readers in the cerebral dramas of pure mathematics.--Taylor, Gilbert Copyright 2008 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
When most of us think of symmetry, we think of looking into a mirror or playing patty-cake with a child. As Oxford don du Sautoy (The Music of the Primes) tells readers, this is only the tip of the triangle in the mathematical realms of symmetry, where symmetrical objects exist in dimensions far beyond our ability to imagine. The author takes readers gently by the hand and leads them elegantly through some steep and rocky terrain as he explains the various kinds of symmetry and the objects they swirl around. Du Sautoy explains how this twirling world of geometric figures has strange but marvelous connections to number theory, and how the ultimate symmetrical object, nicknamed "the Monster," is related to string theory. This book is also a memoir in which du Sautoy describes a mathematician's life and how one makes a discovery in these strange lands. He also blends in minibiographies of famous figures like Galois, who played significant roles in this field. This is mainly for science buffs, but fans of scientific biographies will also find it appealing. B&w illus. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A pilgrimage through the uncanny world of symmetry. Du Sautoy (Mathematics/Oxford; The Music of the Primes: Searching to Solve the Greatest Mystery in Mathematics, 2003, etc.) has two concerns. The first is defining the role of symmetry as a key to understanding many of nature's intimate relationships: how it reveals genetic superiority through the conspicuous display of energy required to produce such beauty; how it signals to creatures (in "a very basic, almost primeval form of communication") to go about the important business of reproduction. Du Sautoy's second concern regards the ways in which symmetry achieves economy, efficiency and stability in nature, as in the comb of a honeybee hive or in spheres like bubbles and raindrops, which place a premium on surface area relative to a given volume. The author's prose is equally economical and elegant, but when he gets going on the math behind the symmetry he enters a realm dense with equations and jargon, likely to give the math-challenged a case of the fantods: "I dive into an explanation of how I think you could use Galois's groups PSL(2, p) built from permuting lines, mixed with zeta functions to try to prove that there are infinitely many Mersenne primes..." Still, du Sautoy doesn't leave readers dangling; he takes pains to explain the secret language of math, even if it requires considerable backing-and-filling to keep pace with him. Impressively, he conveys the thrill of grasping the mathematics that lurk in the tile work of the Alhambra, or in palindromes, or in French mathematician Évariste Galois's discovery of the interactions between the symmetries in a group. Not for the faint of mathematical heart, but a dramatically presented and polished treasure of theories. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.