Rocks, Minerals & Gems: The
Definitive Visual Catalog of the Treasure Beneath Your Feet. By Sean
Callery and Miranda Smith. Photos by Gary Ombler. Scholastic. $19.99.
The amazement of the
ordinary is what drives this wonderful look at things we encounter constantly
but to which we generally pay very little attention. “We could not live without
rocks – we would have nothing to stand on and build with!” explain Sean Callery
and Miranda Smith, and when you think about things that way, rocks are
absolutely remarkable. Yet they are mundane, too, so familiar and commonplace
that it is hard to recognize the astonishing processes that create them: a
simple curbstone, for example, is “born in magma; blasted from a volcano;
collected, ground up, and transformed into an unnoticed, everyday part of our
world.”
That is, rocks would be
unnoticed if it were not for authors like Callery and Smith and, to at least as
great an extent, a photographer as skilled as Gary Ombler, whose work – added
to a great many photos taken from a great variety of other sources – makes the
nonliving rocks, minerals and gems in this book seem to come alive. For one
thing, the extreme closeups of rocks show details of their appearance in ways
not normally seen in our daily life, and those details, the crystalline
regularity and layered beauty and hugely varied colors, make for splendid
viewing. Add to that the many photos showing how rocks and minerals are used
structurally and decoratively: the malachite foyer in the Grand Kremlin Palace
in Moscow, the Aztec sacrificial knife with a chalcedony blade, the 11th-century
Peruvian mask using pigment made from cinnabar, the fossil-containing shale in
which creatures from half a billion years ago may be found – there are wonders
aplenty here, and a great deal to explore and marvel at.
The uses of rock are nearly
infinite. Rocks, Minerals & Gems
shows an airplane whose fuselage is based on graphite, a 300-year-old flintlock
pistol in which the explosion that fires the bullet is made by striking a piece
of flint, a camera lens whose focusing ability is due to fluorite, the
magnificent Pantheon dome built out of pumice during the rule of the Roman
emperor Hadrian, a set of 34 monasteries and temples carved out of a basalt
cliff in India, and much more. And then there are gemstones: as the authors
point out, only 130 of the 5,000 or so minerals on Earth are considered good
enough to become gemstones, and only about 50 of those 130 are commonly used.
Here readers encounter topaz and citrine, beryl and carnelian, agate and
morganite, aquamarine and ametrine, as well as the more-familiar diamond, garnet,
ruby, and emerald.
This is a visual book above
all, but there is also plenty of well-put-together information in it for
readers. It is easy to forget, with all the areas into which Scholastic has
moved (notably including U.S. publication of the Harry Potter books), that the
company has its roots in education – and still handles that field remarkably
well when it comes to books like this one. For example, in the discussion of
quartz, the most common mineral on Earth, there are photos and clear
explanations of the ninth-century enamel-and-quartz Alfred Jewel, the use by
Roman soldiers of tigereye, the belief that rose quartz can heal a broken
heart, the association of chalcedony with the goddess Diana, the use of smoky
quartz in crystal balls, and more. The authors explain why opal is referred to
as a mineraloid rather than a mineral (mainly because it does not have a
crystalline structure), and tell readers that many gems in crowns around the
world are said to be rubies but are actually spinels. This is a book to read in
any direction, choosing pages sequentially or at random, paying attention for
any amount of time – a work to explore at your own pace and browse through as
your curiosity motivates you. Parents and children alike will find here a
mixture of science and beauty, fact and myth, fascinating history (arsenic has
been used in mineral baths and to improve breathing, as well as to kill) and
up-to-date information (graphene, a layer of graphite only one atom thick, is
100 times stronger than steel). Rocks,
Minerals & Gems is a book that makes the ordinary extraordinary – or,
more accurately, shows that what seems to be mundane is in reality quite
remarkable.
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