Books for Biological & Biomedical PhD Students
It’s never too early to plan your summer reading. A variety of books for biological and biomedical PhD students, suggested straight from our Academic Tweeps for your reading enjoyment:
“Why We Sleep”
by Matthew Walker, PhD
More of a leisure book with science backed information. Sleep is so important during any stage in life and going through graduate school myself, I certainly undervalued sleep.
@MikeMMolnar
Just read this about two months ago and my perspective on sleep changed. Absolute treasure. Although for me it was better to listen to the book than to read it.
@TM_Mokhothu
Breath from Salt
by Bijal P. Trivedi
About discovering the underlying cause of cystic fibrosis, how the mechanism was worked out by basic scientists, and how application of novel technology to a new field allowed identification of drug targets that have revolutionized the lives of CF patients.
@CShaver_MD
Advice for a Young Investigator
by Ramón y Cajal
My grad student mentor suggested this book when I was an undergrad—highly recommend!
…famous for his work as a neuroscientist
@KavyaSharman
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
by Rebecca Skloot
@EvolvedTech
Came to say this! Great read!
@ViviMarza
Lab Girl
by H. Jahren
Definitely “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” – R Skloot, and “Lab Girl” – H Jahren.
@MostlyMicroglia
Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers
by Robert Sapolsky
Or listen to his Great Courses series on audible, it’s basically a recap of the book but with casual side notes.
@DrTaraB20
An Immense World
I Contain Multitudes
by Ed Yong
Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic
by David Quammen
T: The Story of Testosterone, the Hormone that Dominates and Divides Us
by Carole Hooven
The Genetic Lottery
by Kathryn Paige Harden
…all amazing choices as well.
@acromar_PdDc
Cell Biology
by Thomas D. Pollard
Cellular and Molecular Immunology
by Abdul K. Abbas
The Biology of Cancer
by Robert A. Weinberg
@javierartwo
The Tale of the Dueling Neurosurgeons
by Sam Kean
The Lady Tasting Tea
by David Salsburg
…are both great for any scientist!
Asperger’s Children
by Edith Sheffer
…is a great read on research ethics, but it’s very heavy and most helpful for autism/human subjects researchers.
@JacoblFeldman
The Code Breaker
by Walter Isaacson
The Genesis Machine
by Webb &Hessel
Fun Reads: I’m a big fan of “The Genesis Machine” by Webb & Hessel if people want to think about the future of biotech engineering.
The Perfect Predator
by Strathdee & Patterson
…is such a cool story about phage therapy.
@SusannaLHarris
Elephants on Acid and Other Bizarre Experiments
by Alex Boese
Apologies for not being able to recommend anything helpful, but this book of weird and bizarre experiments could make for some fun light reading.
@JazliAziz
The Messenger
by Stephen Loftus
…Only about half way through, but it’s a super interesting! Especially if you’re interested in biotech strategy and current events!
@Dan_biotech
Immune
by Philip Detmer
I recently read Immune by Philip Detmer, the creator of Kurtzgezart. It was simple but the illustrations were amazing.
@wellfedscienti1
Molecular Biology of the Cell
by Bruce Albert
@alizoology
100 ways to improve your writing
by Gary Provost
@elenazemi
Other Minds
by Peter Godfrey-Smith
A great reflection on how we view other members of the animal kingdom in contrast to how we understand ourselves from both a scientific and philosophical protective.
@LeandreRavatt
From a beginners perspective: Essential biomaterials science
by D.Williams
Cell and molecular biology
by N.Chandar and S.Viselli
The Cell
by Alan Cowling
Molecular biology of the cell
by Elsevier
@freddy_amara
Plastic Fantastic: How the Biggest Fraud in Physics Shook the Scientific World
by Eugenie Samuel Reich
Plastic Fantastic is a great place to begin.
@theanupamkumar
You Can’t Afford the Luxury of a Negative Thought
by Peter McWilliams and J. Roger
@IW_Consulting
Experimental Design for Biologists
by David J. Glass
…is a great book to read and have on your shelf.
Cell Biology by the Numbers
by Milo & Phillips
…is also good.
@ronpar63
Why We Get Sick
by Nesse & Williams
Or for a more recent textbook on the same topic…
Evolutionary Medicine
by Stearns & Medzhitov
@DavidBahry
Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men
by Caroline Criado Perez
@byubabe8
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