What I'm Reading Now:

Saturday, May 12, 2007

The Radioactive Boy Scout

Title: The Radioactive Boy Scout

Author: Ken Silverstein

Pages: 209

Genre: Biography

Letter Grade: B+

Synopsis: This is the biography of David Hahn as a teenager outside of Detroit, Michigan. He was a science genius and spent much of his life attempting to build a model breeder reactor, which is quite different than a normal nuclear reactor (and much, much more difficult to build). This book chronicles his achievements, first building his own fireworks, brewing moonshine and creating a self-tanning lotion. Eventually he sets his sights on obtaining every element on the periodic table. Most of his peers, teachers and scout leaders didn't see just how ambitious and ingenious David really was. The methods that he used to obtain radium, thorium, americium, uranium, lithium and many other elements is very impressive but very scary as he took little thought towards protecting himself. Eventually he does build a neutron gun and a highly radioactive nuclear reactor (not a real breeder reactor).

My Review: I really enjoyed this book. I believe that I first heard about it in an IEEE magazine. There is really a lot of chemistry in the book and those interested in chemistry would probably enjoy this book even more than I did. David's scientific ambition is very impressive. Unfortunately for him, this ambition didn't translate well into schoolwork. It's a little nerve wracking the kinds of things that can go on right under your nose (in his case his parents' nose).

From the Book: "(p. 105) But David had discovered a secret, which had been first revealed to him when he read in his Boy Scout materials about polonium and americium: Many household and consumer items contain radioactive elements. Perhaps they contained only small quantities and certainly not in a pure form, but David figured he could devise means of isolating and gathering radioactive elements from store-bought goods."

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