Marie Curie and Radioactivity

by Ian Graham

Published 1 October 2018
This narrative non-fiction series tells the stories of great moments in science as if through the eyes of the scientists and inventors themselves. The stories are told like an adventure, with all the dramas, missteps and struggles along the way, ultimately leading to the 'Eureka' moment of triumph. The books use all the tropes of fiction - dialogue, action, suspense - to tell true-life tales of human discovery and achievement. Readers will discover what happened during these milestones of science - but crucially, they will also be able to imagine what it might have felt like to be at the cutting edge of progress.

The narratives are interspersed with short comic strips dramatising significant episodes and boxes to explain scientific concepts, as well as historical information to set the story in a wider context. The end matter contains a timeline, a glossary and an index, and some books feature a map.

In Marie Curie and Radioactivity we follow the famed scientist as she secretly educates herself in a time and place where women were forbidden to study, discovers radioactivity and uses its properties to learn about the natural world and save the lives of soldiers in the trenches during WWI.

Charles Darwin and Evolution

by Ian Graham

Published 1 October 2018
This narrative non-fiction series tells the stories of great moments in science as if through the eyes of the scientists and inventors themselves. The stories are told like an adventure, with all the dramas, missteps and struggles along the way, ultimately leading to the 'Eureka' moment of triumph. The books use all the tropes of fiction - dialogue, action, suspense - to tell true-life tales of human discovery and achievement. Readers will discover what happened during these milestones of science - but crucially, they will also be able to imagine what it might have felt like to be at the cutting edge of progress.

The narratives are interspersed with short comic strips dramatising significant episodes and boxes to explain scientific concepts, as well as historical information to set the story in a wider context. The end matter contains a timeline, a glossary and an index.

In Charles Darwin and Evolution we follow the famed scientist as he travels to the Galapagos islands onboard the Beagle, develops his groundbreaking theory of evolution, and defends his ideas as they face hostility from the Victorian society around him.