‘**** (4 Stars) Despite the ‘science’ in ‘science fiction’ there are a lot of SF fans who are struck with dread at the very thought of a science class. This book is written for them ... Kaklios is a man who loves both physics and comics, and it really shines through’ SFX
‘Kakalios’s use of such stories to elucidate the finer points of impulse and momentum is extremely readable ... the book comes into its own with the weird fauna of modern physics, such as infinite universes, when the dynamic, imagistic approach of Kakalios’s writing makes it all seem eminently graspable, at least in rough outline ... as a whole the book is, um, super ’ Guardian
Acclaimed university professor James Kakalios shows that comic book heroes and villains get their physics right more often than you would think.
If superheroes stepped off the comic book page or silver screen and into reality, could they actually work their wonders in a world constrained by the laws of physics? How strong would Superman have to be to ‘leap tall buildings in a single bound’? Could Storm of the X-Men possibly control the weather? Face front, True Believer, and wonder no more! Because in The Physics of Superheroes you’ll learn what the physics of forces and motion can reveal about Superman’s strength; the true cause of the destruction of his home planet Krypton and what villains Magneto and Electro can teach us about the nature of electricity. Fun and provocative, The Physics of Superheroes will make both comic-book fans and physicists exclaim, ‘Excelsior!’