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Elements #1

Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe

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With more than 1 million copies sold worldwide, The Elements is the most entertaining, comprehensive, and visually arresting book on all 118 elements in the periodic table. Includes a poster of Theodore Gray's iconic photographic periodic table of the elements! Based on seven years of research and photography by Theodore Gray and Nick Mann, The Elements presents the most complete and visually arresting representation available to the naked eye of every atom in the universe. Organized sequentially by atomic number, every element is represented by a big beautiful photograph that most closely represents it in its purest form. Several additional photographs show each element in slightly altered forms or as used in various practical ways. Also included are fascinating stories of the elements, as well as data on the properties of each, including atomic number, atomic symbol, atomic weight, density, atomic radius, as well as scales for electron filling order, state of matter, and an atomic emission spectrum. This of solid science and stunning artistic photographs is the perfect gift book for every sentient creature in the universe.

241 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 1, 2009

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8,506 people want to read

About the author

Nick Mann

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Nick Mann is a freelance photographer and the co-photographer of The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe and Molecules: The Elements and the Architecture of Everything. Aside from having photographed more elements than probably anyone in the world, he is an accomplished landscape, sports, and event photographer. He lives in Urbana, Illinois.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 423 reviews
Profile Image for H (no longer expecting notifications) Balikov.
2,076 reviews811 followers
February 7, 2019
For those of a scientific bent who enjoy getting their knowledge along with helpful photographs, tables and diagrams, this is a place worth visiting. It is organized by way of the periodic table, that classic graphic, with which most of us had to become familiar before college.

There are several levels of detail in this book, so it may hook you into revisiting “elements� from time to time. You can preview the book on the Amazon site

Here is a sample:
"Beryllium is a light metal (though three and a half times the density of lithium, it’s still significantly less dense than aluminum, element 13). Where lithium is soft, low-melting, and reactive, beryllium is strong, melts at a high temperature, and is notably resistant to corrosion. These properties, combined with its high cost and poisonous nature, account for the unique niche beryllium has carved out for itself: missile and rocket parts, where cost is no object, where strength without weight is king, and where working with toxic materials is the least of your worries.

"Beryllium has other fancy applications. It is transparent to x-rays, so it’s used in the windows of x-ray tubes, which need to be strong enough to hold a perfect vacuum, yet thin enough to let the delicate x-rays out. A few percent of it alloyed with copper (29) forms a high-strength, nonsparking alloy used for tools deployed around oil wells and flammable gases, where a spark from an iron tool could spell disaster, in great big flaming red letters. In keeping with the sport of golf’s tendency to use high-tech materials out of a desperate hope that they may help get the ball where it’s supposed to go, beryllium copper is also used in golf-club heads. Needless to say, it doesn’t help any more than the manganese bronze or titanium (22) used for the same purpose.

"Combining beauty with brawn, the mineral beryl is a crystalline form of beryllium aluminum cyclosilicate. You may be more familiar with the green and blue varieties of beryl, which are known as emerald and aquamarine."

And for the more geekish:
"It is this filling order that determines the shape of the periodic table. The first two columns represent electrons filling “s� orbitals. The next ten columns are electrons filling the five “d� orbitals. The final six columns are electrons filling the three “p� orbitals. And last but not least, the fourteen rare earths are electrons filling the seven “f� orbitals. (If you’re asking yourself why helium, element 2, is not above beryllium, element 4, congratulations—you’re thinking like a chemist rather than a physicist.)"

A very pleasing book both in text and graphics, rendered beautifully for the Kindle Fire.
Profile Image for Kelli.
925 reviews439 followers
December 2, 2017
I did not particularly enjoy chemistry, nor do I remember it very well, apparently! There have been some elements added to the periodic table since I was in school, but not as many as I thought. My 9-year-old son chose this at his school book fair and we have read it from cover to cover. He enjoys quizzing me and there are SO many that I’m convinced are new! Ha! Nope.

This book is informative and visually interesting. Packed with photo examples of elements in everyday objects and pieces from the author’s collection, as well as lots of important information (atomic weight, radius, density,etc) and interesting facts. Making science fun!
Profile Image for Chris.
341 reviews1,090 followers
July 3, 2010
When I was a kid, my father had the entire Time/Life science series. For you young whippersnappers, Time/Life books were educational series that covered all kinds of topics - history, science, literature, you name it. The idea was that you sign up and they send you books, once a month, until the series was finished or you decided you no longer wanted to receive it.

The Science series focused on, of course, science, with books devoted to every facet of physics, medicine, chemistry, biology.... It was a fantastic compendium of human knowledge in those pre-internet days, and I just loved it. I learned about how traveling at lightspeed squashes things by reading a story about spies chasing each other on the Lightspeed Express. I learned about how different drugs affect the mind and body. I learned about how important the wheel was, what water could do, and how the food we eat determines almost everything about our lives.

My favorite volume of all of them was titled Matter, and it was about all the stuff there is. At the center of it was a pictorial representation of all the elements known to science in 1968. Everything from Hydrogen to Uranium and beyond. I could pore over those pages for hours, amazed by the idea that these things were all there was, made up everything around me. Learning that just (Oxygen, Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Calcium and Phosphorus) made up most of, well, me was just mind-bending.

I don't know where that book is now - probably in a box at my mother's house - but the effect that it had on me has lasted ever since my childhood. In fact, as I was researching this review, I found and got completely distracted by the struggle to not buy any of them. So that's how Time/Life made me into a science nerd. Nevertheless, I was thrilled when I saw this book, and had to snap it up as soon as I could. It cost a whole lot less than a 1/10 troy ounce Rhodium coin

Theodore Gray is an element hunter - something I didn't even know existed when I was a kid. He has made a hobby of trying to collect samples of every element that is is possible to (legally) own, and he's even built . A periodic table, as it were, which won him the IgNobel Prize in Chemistry in 2002. He and Nick Mann went through the collection to make outstanding, high-quality photographs and compile them into a fantastic book about "everything you can drop on your foot."

It starts, of course, with a basic rundown of what an element is - a substance made of only one type of atom - and what the Periodic Table is - an organization of the elements by their common properties. There's also a page explaining the physics behind the shape of the table, what an "electron filling order" is, and why the atomic emission spectrum is so important. Fortunately for us non-professionals, he does this is a way that is amusing and understandable. Gray knows that his audience isn't professional chemists or grad students - it's people like me. People who are fans of science, but who, for one reason or another, never got into the real nitty-gritty of it. All of this means that it's a book you can enjoy even if you remember nothing from high school chemistry other than "BIFF=WANG." [1:]

The book starts, of course, at hydrogen, the element that makes the sun burn ("Even at night," alleges the author, but I'll believe that when I see it) and ends with Ununoctium, which will no doubt get a proper name once those crazy kids in the high-energy physics lab get around to assembling it. It includes the spectre of the modern age, Uranium, and its evil twin Plutonium. There's Carbon, without which none of us would be here, and Arsenic, which does a fine job of seeing to it that we cease to be. There's Iron, which we use in abundance, and Dysprosium, which has almost no uses that you've ever heard of. Cesium tells us what time it is, and Krypton, which used to tell us how long things were (before we figured out the speed of light.) Strontium and Calcium, Sodium and Americium, Gold, Silver, Copper and Lead - every element is in here, waiting for you.

They're accompanied by wonderful photographs that illustrate the applications of each element, as well as diagrams showing its emission spectrum, crystal structure, and other information that you may or may not be interested in. Regardless of how much you know about chemistry, you should find this to be a fascinating and enjoyable book. Moreover, if you have kids and you want them to be exposed to science in a way that engages their fascination and imagination, then this is the book for you. Just be ready to raise a science nerd, and if they ask for an elemental coin for their birthday, remember - Lead isn't just for toys anymore!

[1:] Thanks, Mr. Hiza!
Profile Image for Karissa.
4,240 reviews211 followers
December 30, 2010
I am a chemist and have always been fascinated by the Periodic Table of Elements. So, imagine my excitement when I saw this book sitting in the bookstore. Not only does it provide information on all 118 elements in the Periodic Table, it does it in a way that is interesting, accessible, and beautiful. This is a book that makes you want to touch it and turn the pages, you just can't resist. The picture of the elements are colorful and intriguing; they are all featured on a stylish black background...this is just a beautiful book.

Each element features a picture of the element in its purest form. The side of the page has a small strip that gives lots of technical data. The elements position on the periodic table is showm, atomic weight, density, atomic radius, crystal structure, electron order filing, atomic emissions spectrum, and state of matter are all given in this strip. The rest of the page is given over to a few paragraphs about the element. Then there are excellent pictures showing instances where the element is used and these pictures also have small descriptions. Most elements are given a two page spread, but some of the lucky elements get 4 pages!

In addition to the individual elements the beginning of the book discusses the different sections of the periodic table and how the periodic table of elements got its shape.

This is more of a coffee table book than an ultimate reference to the Periodic Table of Elements. Although it does provide a lot of information on the Elements. Much of the discussion on each Element is anecdotal and somewhat humorous. This makes the book an excellent reference for the layman interested in Elements, it also makes the book an entertaining read. You would have to go elsewhere to get into the gritty details of some of these elements though....for example if you were trying to synthesize something with them or something else deeply technical.

Overall I really loved this book. It is such an awesome book with such neat pictures. Everyone in the house from my computer loving husband to my three year old son has spent time looking through this book. It is just such an interesting book and it is presented in such a beautiful way. Not to mention it is even fun to read! I think everyone should have this book in their house; if nothing else it makes for interesting discussions as you see the bizarre forms of some of the elements.
Profile Image for Carol.
75 reviews6 followers
July 21, 2010
I think I might go 4.5 stars on this if that were an option. This got great reviews and was recommended for purchase by Jon M., one of our science teachers. I sat down to catalog it yesterday and ended up pretty much reading the whole thing. It has been many a year since I had to think about Chemistry, but even if I had zero background in the subject I think I still would have found the book fascinating.

First of all, it's just a thing of beauty - black background pages with photos that just pop out at you (more on that later), of objects made from each element. There's also a chunk of text spelling out the most intriguing tidbits about the properties and history of the element in question, always ending with a clever segue into the next element. (While I imagine some might find that to be a little forced by the time the last element rolls around, I really enjoyed the humor, and it also served to reinforce the importance of the placement of the elements in the table; just as with the Dewey Decimal System, similar topics/elements sit side-by-side ).

Speaking of humor, there were several places where I found myself laughing out loud, e.g., under the description for europium: "With the invention of europeum-based red phosphors, color television could suddenly become bright and vibrant, thus contributing even more effectively to the rotting of children's minds the world over."

Now about that 3-D effect... If you go to the author's website () you can see the photographic periodic table and click on the element of most interest to you. There, you can view a video of the object of your choice rotating in space, and/or move it around with your keyboard. But, to go one step even better, for those of you with iPads you can install an app that lets you access the book and turn the objects around using your finger! I do appreciate it when a technology is used for something it is uniquely suited to do, and this seems to be such an instance. Can't wait to try it on an iPad - Sharan?

7 reviews
September 3, 2011
When I picked up this book in the library I skimmed the first couple of pages, looked at a random entry, and really liked what I saw. When I started reading it, I laughed out loud at the first line: "The periodic table is the universal catalog of everything you can drop on your foot."

But then things started to slip. Gray's humor is wildly uneven and mixes on-target wit with ham-fisted jokes and gratuitous insults aimed at anything he considers silly or stupid. This kind of arbitrary prejudice and bigotry have no place in a book like this. By way of example, I will quote from the first paragraph about Yttrium (the last entry I could stand to read): "Yttrium is something of a hippy element. First, it's named after a village is Sweden, a notably loose country. Second, it is beloved by new age practitioners .... it really ticks me off ascribe magical properties to things in the world that are magical, but in ways they completely miss."

Gray is not a scientist. A scientist would simply make his case and move on. Confronted by something he did not accept, he would say, "Really?? Show me your data." And Gray is not a science writer because a real science writer knows that he isn't writing for the editorial page. No, Gray is either terribly insecure and threatened by alien beliefs or he is an agent of science-turned-fundamentalist-religion. Either way, his comments are unacceptable in a book about real science, even one intended for a mass audience.

This is a crushing disappointment. Where Gray is funny, he is funny. The photographs are gorgeous, the examples are compelling, and the structure of the book overall makes an excellent tour of the elements. And I really enjoyed seeing examples of Gray's fascination with the elements in the carvings and sculptures he has made over the years.

Get rid of the frat boy humor and social agenda, and I'd give this five stars in a heartbeat.
Profile Image for Sheila .
1,991 reviews
March 13, 2017
Yes, this is a book about the Periodic Table of elements, you know that thing they made you memorize in school that bored you to tears and that you didn't enjoy at all. This book takes something that many thought was just memorization and boredom and makes it extremely interesting, amusing, fascinating, engrossing, and yes, even educational. The photos are fabulous. The information is presented in a highly engrossing format. If you have any interest at all in the elements, or are having to study the periodic table and are not enjoying it, then you need this book. It is fabulous.
Profile Image for Shiloah.
Author1 book192 followers
July 11, 2022
Another book my son-in-law Ben chose to read with the family for read-aloud. We have been learning so much about the elements since he’s joined our family two years ago. It’s been an enlightening journey!
The wit of this author is very similar to the last book we read with my SIL. Makes it more entertaining.
Profile Image for Nick Black.
Author2 books867 followers
February 18, 2014
i've bought this guy's beautiful poster twice ( you can see it in my atlanta condo's technical bay (). so, when i saw this sitting around at google, i picked it up and read it through. the pictures and printing are stunning, and it's one of the most perfect coffee tables i've ever seen. i deduct two stars, however, due to wasting a quarter of every recto page on highly repetitive graphics, redundant in and of themselves (if you're going to do a pigeonhole representation of electron positions, you don't also need do a pictorial s-d-p-f representation, which latter isn't even meaningful in the first place, argh). i like the spectral display for each element, but including actual wavelengths along with color would have been nice. common compounds of each element could have occupied some of this space much more effectively. there's a very heavy emphasis on metallurgy and mechanical engineering in the way-too-short writeups. most elements' nomenclature is explained, but not all. if you wanted to know that carbon* derives its named from latin carbo (coal), you'll have to look elsewhere.

i was really surprised that certain basic weirdnesses of the Table (increases of atomic number corresponding to decreases in mass, the science behind state transitions, which are the least/most for any number of properties, etc.).

the bibliography is unspeakably wretched, and no citations are supplied. you're buying this for the pictures, plain and simple.

it turns out the author works at wolfram research, take that for whatever it's worth, if anything (if the words mean nothing to you, just ignore this).

overall, a beautiful book with much less impressive text, though i dig enjoy his constant vituperation regarding incandescent light bulbs.

* note that he does bother to explain that, e.g., europium is named after europe, which i'd rather hope one could figure out, or is in any case less than a question of "carbon" which i suppose one could think meant "good car" or something. either way i don't think anyone so stupid is reading about europium.
Profile Image for Heather.
54 reviews5 followers
January 12, 2010
What can I say? The Periodic Table has never seemed so cool in this gorgeously photographed coffee table book.

This is not a reference work, although it does contain basic information on each element like its position in the periodic table, atomic weight, density, atomic radius, crystal structure, electron filling order, atomic emission spectrum, and state of matter (solid/liquid/gas) vs temperature.

Instead .. it is a work to inspire wonder with first-rate, brilliantly-lit photographs for almost every element drawn from the author's extensive personal collection. Which is truly riveting and awesome in its scope. The photos are well-captioned and help flesh out and complement the brief text essay accompanying each element. A hybrid of trivia and facts mixed together with a liberal dash of dry wit, the text is so quippy and fascinating that for many elements I wished it wasn't so scanty and that there was just .... more.

You'll definitely find yourself thinking differently about what things are made of after pondering these pages. A walk through your local home improvement store will certainly never seem the same, that's for sure.

Appropriate for science fans, chemistry lovers, and chic geeks of any age. And if you can't get enough, there is a periodic table poster using the photos available separately too .. highly recommended.

Profile Image for A.R. Thompson.
134 reviews
October 10, 2019
This is a great textbook for an introduction into the magnificent world of elements. From gold to uranium, hydrogen to potassium, Theodore Gray accurately and simply explains the properties and uses of both in the past and now that humankind has discovered-- with a bit of humor sprinkled in.
Profile Image for Catelyn May.
56 reviews51 followers
November 29, 2011
I love this book so much, it's ridiculous. As someone who spent most of high school and college trying to like science and failing (often in more than one way--I'm looking at you, Organic Chemistry!), as in adult I've come to love books that make science interesting. I've been into pop-physics lately, and occasionally the history of math, and like those, this book really makes me wonder why science education is so damn boring. Every Chem class I took felt so overwhelmingly dry and irrelevant, when in fact we are surrounded by chemicals compounds all day every day. All it takes is some cool (very very cool) photographs of the elements, and some more cool pictures of related items, and BAM! science is awesome!

I flip through this book when I'm bored. It's the perfect coffee table book for nerdy people like me. If every high school kid had read this instead of staring blankly at that damn colored elements chart that look something the 1970s coughed up, we'd have more chemists and scientists in general. Or at least they'd know how pretty crystallized Bismuth is. (Really, it's very pretty.)
Profile Image for Jovi Ene.
Author2 books273 followers
July 13, 2019
”Elementele� este o lucrare masivă, care ia tabelul elementelor al lui Mendeleev și analizează, descrie, înfățișează toate cele 118 elemente cunoscute, cum au fost descoperite și la ce sunt întrebuințate. Imaginile sunt extraordinare. Nivelul este oarecum mai ridicat, dar pentru o persoană pasionată de chimie de orice vârstă este enciclopedia (aproape) perfectă.
Profile Image for Ryan Alsaihaty.
146 reviews34 followers
July 8, 2018
Light, informative, illustrative, simple, and sometimes funny. This book is perfect to read when you have free few minutes, as each element takes no longer than 3-4 minutes to read and learn about.
Profile Image for Some Small Silence.
36 reviews7 followers
April 27, 2010
I am a tutor at a nationally recognized tutoring center. One of our brightest students brought this book in to work with as an enrichment product. I will freely admit that I am generally not an enormous fan of hard science, and was a bit hesitant when I was first faced with it. I'm a history major, and I chose the topic for my Marine Biology term paper based on the fact that Sea Otters are really cute. That's why I was quite surprised when I found this book fascinating. Its blend of valuable scientific information, humor, and history makes it eminently readable. The photography is beautiful and varied, and the layout is incredibly well configured.
Elements is accessible enough for my 10 year old student to enjoy it thoroughly, but deep enough that I have to fight the urge to read it in session. I will be buying a copy for myself and another for a good friend who is an astronomer at the Space Telescope Institute. I would heartily recommend this to anyone who wants to foster an interest in science, whether it be in their children or in themselves.
Profile Image for Noah Goats.
Author8 books32 followers
March 31, 2017
Theodore Gray loves the elements. LOVES THEM. He reminds me of that one science teacher everyone has at some point. The science teacher that everyone loves. The one who does crazy experiments that endanger the lives of everyone in the classroom. Gray's humor, wit, and sheer enthusiasm for his subject will pull you right through this book. Things do slow down with the lanthanides, perhaps the most boring of elements (as even Gray acknowledges) but they pick back up right away. Reading this has given me a new appreciation for man's ability to find a use for just about anything, and (with the help of its many interesting photographs) has opened my eyes to the elements all around me.
Profile Image for Andree Sanborn.
258 reviews13 followers
November 18, 2017
This beautiful book should be in every science classroom (if not in every class). The poster should be on the wall and the web site should be bookmarked by every child. There is a brief description and history of every element. The photographs are wonderful. It takes a lot of reading, note-taking and effort to understand the elements. This book of trivia is the icing on the cake.

The web site:

Gray's science column:
Profile Image for Fran.
10 reviews
November 2, 2009
"Coffee Table" style book that's easy to pick up, hard to put down.
Profile Image for Trace.
1,012 reviews39 followers
January 28, 2015
My son read this one and gives it a 5 star rating.
Profile Image for Julia.
308 reviews64 followers
June 20, 2021
This book is fantastic. My son has read it many times, and wants to start his own elements collection.
Profile Image for Phil.
12 reviews
May 1, 2019
Great photos of the elements in the periodic table. Mr. Gray's collection itself is probably worth unimaginable quantities in knowledge, if we could put a price to that.

The text provides tidbits of knowledge about the elements, several stories of which could be followed up in more detailed expositions (such as the ones about ships and sunken treasures).
15 reviews
December 29, 2021
Õppisin väga palju sellest raamatust. Soovitan
Profile Image for Michelle Fournier.
457 reviews13 followers
April 6, 2021
Not 5 stars because it is anywhere near to a favorite book; but for what this is as a visual non-fiction intro to the elements this is Excellent! Loved by all my children and so informative too.
Profile Image for Kiso.
80 reviews
April 28, 2025
Read this for magic system inspiration
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