BOOK REVIEW26 June 2026Andrew Robinson reviews five of the best science picks.ByAndrew Robinson0Andrew RobinsonAndrew Robinson is a writer based in London and author of Earthshock (1993), The Story of Measurement (2007) and Einstein in Oxford (2024).View author publicationsSearch author on: PubMed Google ScholarThe Secret World of TwilightSally Coulthard Apollo (2026)“Twilight is the blazing cauldron that separates day from night,” writes Sally Coulthard in her charming natural history of dawn and dusk, when skies radiate colours, landscapes change their mood and creatures come out of the shadows. As a prolific nature writer living in a farmhouse in rural England with her gardener husband and flocks of animals, Coulthard is well qualified. Her vivid examples include a Yorkshire slang term: ‘sparrow’s fart’, meaning the near-silent moment before dawn when you might catch the faint “parps” of a waking bird.The Hidden Lives of Lab AnimalsLarry Carbone Univ. California Press (2026)Having spent four decades working with animals that are often hidden in laboratories, veterinary surgeon Larry Carbone knows that “every contact with animals is an ethical encounter”. The book examines species ranging from pythons and fleas to dogs and gorillas, and notes that the ethical complexity of experimentation is profound. How do we recognize animal pain? Which human medical conditions justify animal testing? Which scientific disciplines truly benefit from it? Surprisingly, no animal experiment is illustrated in the book.The Dreaded PoxOlivia Weisser Cambridge Univ. Press (2026)Seventeenth- and eighteenth-century London has been dubbed a “City of Sin”, notes historian Olivia Weisser, although she prefers a “Republic of Venus”. Her eye-opening book about venereal disease — known then as pox — is set in the city’s streets, shops, homes and courts. Spread through sexual activity, pox had complex symptoms, ranging from burning sensations during urination to paralysis. But because the disease was “malleable, easily concealed, and frequently misdiagnosed”, pox has largely escaped historical analysis.Solar EclipsesWilliam Sheehan Reaktion (2026)doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-026-02055-wCompeting InterestsThe author declares no competing interests.SubjectsArtsCultureLatest on:ArtsCultureJobs Interim Associate or Senior Editor, Nature EnergyJob Title: Interim Associate or Senior Editor, Nature Energy Fixed Term Contract, Full-Time Locations: London or Milan – Hybrid Work About Spri...London (Central), London (Greater) (GB)Springer Nature LtdFaculty Positions in Westlake UniversityFounded in 2018, Westlake University is a new type of non-profit research-oriented university in Hangzhou, China, supported by public a...Hangzhou, Zhejiang, ChinaWestlake UniversityPostdoctoral ResearcherMolecular Mechanisms and Neural Circuits of Fear Memory, Maternal and Social Behavior. A recent PhD in molecular biology / neuroscience.Piscataway, New JerseyRutgers University Shumyatsky lab