Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Reviser's Foreword
- Gamow's Preface to Mr Tompkins in Paperback
- 1 City Speed Limit
- 2 The Professor's Lecture on Relativity which Caused Mr Tompkins's Dream
- 3 Mr Tompkins takes a Holiday
- 4 The Notes of the Professor's Lecture on Curved Space
- 5 Mr Tompkins Visits a Closed Universe
- 6 Cosmic Opera
- 7 Black Holes, Heat Death, and Blow Torch
- 8 Quantum Snooker
- 9 The Quantum Safari
- 10 Maxwell's Demon
- 11 The Merry Tribe of Electrons
- 11½ The Remainder of the Previous Lecture through which Mr Tompkins Dozed
- 12 Inside the Nucleus
- 13 The Woodcarver
- 14 Holes in Nothing
- 15 Visiting the ‘Atom Smasher’
- 16 The Professor's Last Lecture
- 17 Epilogue
- Glossary
Gamow's Preface to Mr Tompkins in Paperback
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Reviser's Foreword
- Gamow's Preface to Mr Tompkins in Paperback
- 1 City Speed Limit
- 2 The Professor's Lecture on Relativity which Caused Mr Tompkins's Dream
- 3 Mr Tompkins takes a Holiday
- 4 The Notes of the Professor's Lecture on Curved Space
- 5 Mr Tompkins Visits a Closed Universe
- 6 Cosmic Opera
- 7 Black Holes, Heat Death, and Blow Torch
- 8 Quantum Snooker
- 9 The Quantum Safari
- 10 Maxwell's Demon
- 11 The Merry Tribe of Electrons
- 11½ The Remainder of the Previous Lecture through which Mr Tompkins Dozed
- 12 Inside the Nucleus
- 13 The Woodcarver
- 14 Holes in Nothing
- 15 Visiting the ‘Atom Smasher’
- 16 The Professor's Last Lecture
- 17 Epilogue
- Glossary
Summary
In the winter of 1938 I wrote a short, scientifically fantastic story (not a science fiction story) in which I tried to explain to the layman the basic ideas of the theory of curvature of space and the expanding universe. I decided to do this by exaggerating the actually existing relativistic phenomena to such an extent that they could easily be observed by the hero of the story, C. G. H.* Tompkins, a bank clerk interested in modern science.
I sent the manuscript to Harper's Magazine and, like all beginning authors, got it back with a rejection slip. The other half-a-dozen magazines which I tried followed suit. So I put the manuscript in a drawer of my desk and forgot about it. During the summer of the same year, I attended the International Conference of Theoretical Physics, organized by the League of Nations in Warsaw. I was chatting over a glass of excellent Polish miod with my old friend Sir Charles Darwin, the grandson of Charles (The Origin of Species) Darwin, and the conversation turned to the popularization of science. I told Darwin about the bad luck I had had along this line, and he said: ‘Look, Gamow, when you get back to the United States dig up your manuscript and send it to Dr C. P. Snow, who is the editor of a popular scientific magazine Discovery published by the Cambridge University Press.’
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The New World of Mr TompkinsGeorge Gamow's Classic Mr Tompkins in Paperback, pp. xi - xiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999