Lab Girl

304 pages

English language

Published Oct. 30, 2017 by Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

ISBN:
978-1-101-87372-4
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(52 reviews)

An illuminating debut memoir of a woman in science; a moving portrait of a longtime friendship; and a stunningly fresh look at plants that will forever change how you see the natural world

Acclaimed scientist Hope Jahren has built three laboratories in which she’s studied trees, flowers, seeds, and soil. Her first book is a revelatory treatise on plant life—but it is also so much more.

Lab Girl is a book about work, love, and the mountains that can be moved when those two things come together. It is told through Jahren’s remarkable stories: about her childhood in rural Minnesota with an uncompromising mother and a father who encouraged hours of play in his classroom’s labs; about how she found a sanctuary in science, and learned to perform lab work done “with both the heart and the hands”; and about the inevitable disappointments, but also the triumphs and exhilarating discoveries, …

12 editions

Interesting

Interesting memoir from paleobotanist Hope Jahren. She intersperses short chapters on plant life with vignettes from her life and career. Interesting because she clearly imparts a love for science as well as relates the shittiness of being a scientist. Other than when she identified the minerals that make up opal as the same mineral used by a tree to create nearly impervious seeds, Jahren does not dwell on the actual scientific process she's pursuing. It's mostly the tedium of creating things needed for experiments, the unfortunate discarding of specimens she tried to smuggle out of Ireland from an impromptu collection, and similar tales from being a scientist. I got a great sense of what her life as a scientist is like, but very few details of the actual science. I'm not sure how I feel about that, as I wasn't quite prepared for it. Extremely well written.

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

I don't really know what to make of this one. I really liked Jahren's discussion of botany and chemistry when it was happening. Jahren is hard on people: her students, her co-workers, but also herself and she pulled no punches in describing herself, which led to challenging passages where I was cringing at her condescension towards colleagues and students. I liked how she depicted herself learning and growing, and making her way through bipolar disease. It was truly vulnerable and authentic. Nonetheless, I don't think I'd send one of my students to rotate through her lab -- it's clear that she embraces the sort of work-to-death environment that academia is struggling to grow out of.

Speaking of generation gaps, I was surprised to find that Jahren has barely more than a decade on me. From the way she described being a woman in science, I would have guessed more like …

Unexpected representation in the ECT field

Content warning Mental Health issues, sexism, post-partum issues (Ableism in reviewer's life also mentioned)

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

As far as memoirs go, I enjoyed the nonlinear style, mixed with natural history, philosophical musings and inner thoughts.

Between the high expectations to overcome as a woman in science, the patriarchal gender norms, the stress of gathering funds alongside her male lab partner with whom she has a special relationship (which had several pressure points, for that relationship to be defined, or to "progress" in a direction she didn't want, even though the expectations were there as well).

Really loved reading about her relationship with her mom. How she had to overcome the imposed upon her housewife status. How she inspired her love for not just reading but exhaustively reading a book.

Also loved her relationship with her husband, how in spite of people telling her, at various points, that she was too inexpressive or too expressive, their relationship had the right chemistry.

Two quotes I really loved:

"People …

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

Ma swoje mocne momenty, ma swoje słabe i wręcz infantylne momenty.
To, że historia jest napisana przez kobietę daje inną perspektywę na organizację nauki, środowisko naukowe. Poza tym jednak pamiętnik ten z czasem staje się coraz bardziej tkliwy (chyba tak po prostu "po kobiecemu") i opisuje relacje prywatne, czy w pewnym momencie wręcz szczegółowy opis porodu. Nie brak jednak ciekawych opisów amerykańskiego systemu nauki czy botanicznych badań autorki, jak również niektórych sytuacji z życia badaczki.
Co drugi rozdział poświęcony jest na opis drzewa (od ogółu do szczegółu) - nie można nie porównać tego do dużo lepszych "Patyków, badyli" U. Zajączkowskiej.
Książka dość nierówna i pamiętnik na przestrzeni stron przyjmuje różnoraką formę. Były strony, gdzie "akcja" bardzo wciągała, a były i takie, które omiatało się przelotnie.
Niemniej jednak samą autorkę całkiem polubiłem, i choć nie jest to nigdzie wprost opisane, to czuje się ten wzrost doświadczenia i wpływu, wzrostu w hierarchii …

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

I did not like this book.

I feel bad because I recommended the book to a book group and it was selected. And I hate-read it.

To be fair, she is an okay writer. But I read this book at the same time as reading Ta-Nehisi Coates' Between the World and Me. His writing is so much better than hers.

There are many similarities between Dr. Jahren and myself - and I won't delineate them. But, she tends to judge and generalize and her judgements are wrong and her generalizations are untrue. It made this a very poor book for me.

I really wanted to like this book. Alas, I do not.

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

I really liked the combination of science and memoir. Sometimes I missed the consistency, though. The author jumps from place to place, often leaving me confused how she got there, what happened to some people, and who is where exactly.

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

I loved this book so much. Back in my academic career, especially the last year, I was actually pretty close to Hope Jahren's field, plants, from the geophysics side. I even worked with a professor who just like her got the Macelwane medal (and was one of the reasons I left academia).
The book is a love story, but a love story with science against any reason. She and her eternal friend Bill figured out how to do the science they loved against sexism, the general hatred of science, shortage of money, situations they were not qualified to handle.
As beautiful as both the life story and the science parts of this book are, it makes me sad. I don't like how she glorifies working any waking moment of your life to be able to be in the field, because I strongly despise the way science works. I feel noone …

Review of 'Lab Girl' on Goodreads

Irreverent and gorgeous blend of scientist memoir, story telling, and botany lesson. I loved the writing, the realities of basic research and women in science, the growth of trees and of human beings, in the wild and in the lab.

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

Carl Sagan said, "If you wish to make apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe." Hope Jahren had to do exactly that because there didn't seem to be a place for her in the one she was born into. Along the way she meets Bill who needed a place as well and she creates one for both of them. That's what science is really about--not taking things for granted--but it's difficult feeling like a misfit because you're seen as one by those who do.

This is a book about the painful sort-of-success of the unorthodox point of view, including the unorthodox points of view of plants. It's a sort-of-success because even the plants are still struggling to survive (no thanks to humans), as is science for curiosity rather than commerce or defense.

I'd like to tell Ms. Jahren that when I was in grad school, my thesis …

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Storygraph'

This is the first book I've pre-ordered for a long time, based on reading Hope Jahren's blog (#HopeJahrenSureCanWrite - an accurate name) and interviews on various media.
I was not disappointed.
The first thing that struck me is that this reads more like a novel than a straight memoir in that her use of language is similar to that you would find in literature and the events related seem to be picked more with a novelist's eye to revealing the characters and their motivation than to, say a journalist's eye for narrative.
My previous benchmark for a book about life in biology labs is [b:Natural Obsessions: Striving to Unlock the Deepest Secrets of the Cancer Cell|23825157|Natural Obsessions Striving to Unlock the Deepest Secrets of the Cancer Cell|Natalie Angier|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1438557140s/23825157.jpg|43437374], but Natalie is a journalist and writes that way. I prefer Lab Girl and will recommend it even to people not interested …

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

A terrific book that gives the reader a great sense of Hope Jahren, by intermingling Jahren's personal life and her professional work (In a way this seems to be the only way to tell the stories of academics, as the distinction between both things is superfluous at best and impossible in so many details).

Jahren recounts anecdotes from the field work, personal setbacks and achievements, the issues that come with doing science while female, mental health, and loss. A very fun and emotional read for, moving me to tears at times.

recommended for: scientists who need to feel less alone and everyone interested in what it means to work in Academia

Review of 'Lab Girl' on 'Goodreads'

Lab Girl tells a beautiful and honest story of pain and victory, of the joy of discovering new things and growing through life with the few people worth having around. Lab Girl made me laugh, I saw myself in its stories and it gave me hope. Hope tells the story of how the rest of us came to science, how we fought and cried, how we didn't sleep and thought we weren't enougn. Hope tells us about the joy, and the friendship, the pure ectasy of a new thing, a thing that is only yours.

Hope teaches us about plants and why they are magical while taking us along as her partner in crime as she does amazing science. She gives me hope that I too can someday make it, and she makes me want to go watch things grow again like I did when I was little.

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Subjects

  • Geobiology
  • Women, united states, biography
  • Biologists
  • Women scientists, biography

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