Hawking's Book

ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Start Test

Related Books

The Brilliant Second Life of Doctor 'Vicious' Harper

The Brilliant Second Life of Doctor 'Vicious' Harper

Betrayed by the husband and the cousin she once trusted, Dr. Harper Reeves finds herself strapped to an operating table—moments away from being dissected alive. Only then does the truth finally surface: Her marriage was a lie. Her suffering was engineered. And Phoebe—her doctor, her blood, her own cousin—was the one who planned it all. As the scalpel rises to carve her open, Harper does the unthinkable. She fights back. One death. One chance. One whispered wish as her life bleeds away: If I could live again… I wouldn’t endure. I wouldn’t bow. I would destroy anyone who dared to use me. And I would burn their world to the ground.
10 130 Chapters
The Paralyzed Billionaire and his nurse: A love story

The Paralyzed Billionaire and his nurse: A love story

Nathaniel King once ruled the world from the clouds, powerful enough to topple industries with a whisper. But one tragic night stripped him of everything his mobility, his trust, and the future he believed was his. Betrayed by those closest to him, he locked himself inside a mansion that became his prison, determined to fade into the silence. Then Ava Bennett walked in. She arrived for the paycheck, not the man. A fighter masking her own exhaustion with stubborn resilience, she didn't just tolerate his fury she challenged it. She cared when he swore he was beyond saving. And slowly, she became the warmth he never thought he’d feel again. But love didn’t just heal the pieces of him he tried to bury it exposed the deadly truth behind the “accident” that shattered his life. Someone wants the King dead. Now, as enemies step from the shadows and lies unravel, Nathaniel must fight not only for his life but for the woman who taught him how to live it. And Ava must decide: run from the danger, or stand with the man who became her home. He lost his world. She became his salvation. Together, they will rise and the throne will never fall again.
10 128 Chapters
The Game of Heavens and Earth

The Game of Heavens and Earth

When the Supreme God of Heavens disappeared, the gods of the Greeks, Norse, Mayans, Egyptians, Chinese, and many more sent their young mortal champions to a magical world in order to participate in the Game of Heavens and Earth on their behalf to win the divine throne. However, the young mortals used their powers, weapons, and tools that were bestowed upon them to form themselves into guilds and create a paradise for everyone. To any kid from Earth, an exciting adventure and new beginning await them, and Sam Roche is one of those lucky chosen ones — or is he still unlucky? Since everything is in peace, Sam tries to build a new life in the City of New Beginning while hiding his dark secrets from his new friends about the sins he committed back on Earth. Eventually, Sam and his friends discover that the strongest guilds have long controlled the paradise, and their rivalry might spark a war that will engulf the land. Wanting to get away as much as possible, they decide that they form their own guild and leave the city. However, a powerful guild is threatening the fragile peace of the magical world in order to win the Game of Heavens and Earth. Sam must either run away to save himself or become a hero to save not only his friends but both worlds.
10 83 Chapters
To live before dying

To live before dying

WARNING ️: this book may contain steamy and sexual content Which is strictly not for kids under 18. "Nathaan....." I screamed as I felt his huge cap at the entrance of my womanhood. Hello didn't give a damn about me as he pressed deeper into my wet pussy. My v walls pulsated around the root of his big cock while he kept pushing inside of me. " Pleaseeee Nathan, you're hard on meeeee" I managed to speak out trying to pull his hips away from mine, rather he retracted his hip and thrusted it dick fully, deeper, stretching me wider enough to accommodate his position. Nathan is a young, handsome, famous musician who lives happily single not until he was diagnosed with a terminal illness that made him bury his life in alcohol and sex. He believes that women are created for sex only and love comes with money. Not until he met a nurse, Eva meadows who isn't moved by his wealth or fame or even his physical looks but all she wishes for is to find true love, not the kind she had with Henry— her boyfriend. Now Eva works as Nathan's personal nurse, what neither of them expects is to fall in love. Not the kind that saves you—but the kind that changes you. He taught her how to feel. She taught him how to live. Now, as time slips away, they must face one impossible truth: Can you really learn to live… when you’re running out of time to love?
10 20 Chapters
A.I.

A.I.

Artificial Intelligence in a Cultivation World.A boy who has nothing has been suddenly gifted with an OP system.Join his journey in the countless realms of reality and discover not only the mysteries of creation but also the secrets behind the enigmatic Immortal Maker“Nameless One” that granted him this mystical power. ^_^
8.4 567 Chapters
My Robot Replaced Me After Death

My Robot Replaced Me After Death

In the third year after my death, the one who remained faithfully by my wife's side was still the bionic robot I had painstakingly designed. It looked exactly like me and carried within it every detail of my mannerisms, speech, and habits. The only difference was that it never lost its temper with her. Because of that, my wife never sensed anything amiss. Yet each night, she brought home a different man, deliberately testing "me," desperate to see the wild jealousy and rage I once wore so vividly. Then, one day, her childhood sweetheart and first love, shoved "me" off the balcony. It was only then, in her horror, that my wife realized… "I" didn't bleed.
0 13 Chapters

What is Stephen Hawking's most famous book?

5 Answers2026-07-06 13:46:25
Stephen Hawking's 'A Brief History of Time' is the one book that pops into my mind whenever someone mentions his name. It’s this incredible blend of cosmology, physics, and philosophy that somehow makes the universe feel both vast and intimate. I remember picking it up years ago, half-expecting to be lost by page two, but Hawking had this knack for explaining mind-bending concepts like black holes and the Big Bang in a way that didn’t make my brain short-circuit. Sure, some sections made me reread paragraphs a few times, but that’s part of the charm—it’s like a puzzle you’re excited to solve.

What really stuck with me, though, was how he wove humanity into the cosmic narrative. The book isn’t just about equations; it’s about curiosity. I still think about his line on 'knowing the mind of God,' which feels especially poignant given his life’s work. Even if you skim the heavier bits, the sheer wonder of it all lingers. It’s no surprise this book sold millions—it turns abstract science into something almost poetic.

What is the best book on physics recommended by Stephen Hawking?

2 Answers2025-08-15 12:58:10
Stephen Hawking's 'A Brief History of Time' is hands down the most iconic physics book he ever recommended, and for good reason. It's like he took the entire universe and distilled it into something anyone can grasp, without losing the magic. I remember reading it for the first time and feeling like my brain was expanding with every page. Hawking had this uncanny ability to make black holes, quantum mechanics, and the Big Bang feel personal, almost intimate. The way he explains time dilation or the nature of space isn't just educational—it's poetic. You can tell he wasn't just a genius; he was a storyteller who wanted everyone to see the cosmos the way he did.

What sets 'A Brief History of Time' apart from other physics books is its balance. It doesn't dumb things down, but it also doesn't drown you in equations. Hawking trusts the reader to follow along, and that respect makes the journey thrilling. I still think about his analogy of the universe being like a bubble in boiling water—simple yet mind-blowing. Even decades later, no other book has made me stare at the night sky with quite the same mix of wonder and understanding. If you want to feel like you're chatting with Hawking over coffee about the secrets of existence, this is the book.

What is hawking's book about in simple terms?

3 Answers2025-09-04 11:12:00
When I cracked open 'A Brief History of Time' I felt like someone handed me a map of the universe written in plain language. The core idea Hawking tries to communicate is simple: what the universe is made of, how it started, how it behaves, and what rules (like gravity and quantum mechanics) govern everything. He walks you through huge concepts — the Big Bang, black holes, the expanding universe, and the nature of time — but he does it by trying to strip away the intimidating math and keeping the big-picture ideas tidy and relatable.

He spends a good chunk of the book on black holes — what they are, why they form, and his famous suggestion that they aren’t entirely black (what became known as Hawking radiation). He also steps into philosophical territory, asking whether the universe had a beginning and what that means for cause and effect. There’s discussion about the arrow of time and entropy, and how the clash between general relativity (big, smooth space-time) and quantum mechanics (weird, small-scale particles) is the puzzle physicists are still trying to solve.

Reading it feels like a guided tour: sometimes speculative, sometimes historical (he introduces classical ideas like Newton and Einstein), and occasionally playful about the limits of what we can know. If you like clear thought experiments and big-picture questions — and maybe want to peek at diagram-y pages or try the audiobook — it’s an inviting place to start exploring how modern science thinks about the cosmos.

Which hawking's book is best for beginners?

3 Answers2025-09-04 03:11:36
Honestly, if you want the gentlest doorway into Hawking's thought, I'd point you to 'A Briefer History of Time'. I picked it up on a slow weekend and loved how it trims down the denser bits from the original while keeping the awe — it's written to be readable, with clearer explanations of things like time, black holes, and the Big Bang. There are still conceptual leaps that require pausing and picturing the idea, but the tone is friendlier and the chapters are bite-sized, which is perfect for dipping in and out.

If you're curious beyond that, follow up with 'The Universe in a Nutshell' because it's visually rich and playful in places; Hawking leaned into illustrations to help people imagine higher-dimensional ideas. For a different flavor, 'Black Holes and Baby Universes' collects essays and interviews that show Hawking's voice — sharp, humorous, human — and it reads less like a textbook and more like conversations over tea.

Practical tip: don't get hung up on symbols or a single paragraph that confuses you. Read slowly, let images form in your head, and check short videos or lectures to reinforce tricky parts. I find re-reading a chapter a few months later often unlocks it in a new way — like discovering a hidden track on a favorite album.

What are the key ideas in hawking's book for students?

3 Answers2025-09-04 13:48:56
I've always loved how Hawking turns mind-bending physics into stories that students can actually follow. In 'A Brief History of Time' he lays out the core ideas you should chew on: space and time are woven together into space–time, gravity is geometry (thank you, general relativity), and the universe likely began in a hot, dense state we call the Big Bang. He contrasts that macroscopic picture with the fuzzy rules of quantum mechanics, and then drives toward the big goal: finding a single framework that unites them, a 'theory of everything.' Hawking also introduces black holes not as sci‑fi monsters but as real objects with surprising behavior — most famously Hawking radiation, which shows black holes can evaporate slowly by quantum processes.

For students, two meta-lessons matter as much as the physics: first, the interplay between theory and observation — how equations must eventually meet measurement; second, the limits of our current knowledge and how productive confusion can be. Hawking sprinkles in accessible math-light explanations, but he doesn't hide the fact that a deeper understanding requires learning differential geometry and quantum field basics. Practically, I tell students to pair the book with visual resources (simulations of curved space, animated black hole diagrams) and to treat the philosophical passages about the origin of the universe as invitations to debate rather than final pronouncements. If you dive in with curiosity and a little patience for the equations, Hawking's work becomes not just information but a roadmap for thinking like a physicist.

Where can I buy hawking's book in affordable editions?

3 Answers2025-09-04 05:23:19
Okay, here’s the lowdown from someone who spends far too much time hunting for cheap paperbacks in both dusty shops and online carts: Stephen Hawking’s popular books — like 'A Brief History of Time', 'The Universe in a Nutshell', and 'Brief Answers to the Big Questions' — are super common in used and affordable editions, so you’ve got options.

I start locally: secondhand bookstores, university bookshops, and charity shops (think Goodwill or Oxfam) are goldmines. I once found a spotless paperback of 'A Brief History of Time' for next to nothing behind a stack of sci-fi novels. Library sales are another favorite — libraries routinely sell donated duplicates and older copies, and the prices are unbeatable. If you prefer clicking instead of browsing, marketplaces like AbeBooks, ThriftBooks, Better World Books, and eBay often list multiple copies at different price points and conditions; I always check ISBNs so I don’t accidentally buy a sticker-priced international hardback. Amazon Marketplace can be cheap too when sellers offer used paperbacks, but watch shipping costs.

For digital-savvy thrifters, Kindle editions, audiobook deals on Audible, or subscription platforms like Scribd can be a bargain — especially during sales. International editions (Penguin/Pocket or local publishers in India, for example) often have lower cover prices but identical content, so I check Flipkart or local online retailers if I’m ordering overseas. Pro tip: older printings rarely change the core content in these popular science books, so prioritize condition and price over newer dust jackets. I avoid pirated PDFs — not worth the risk — and instead hunt for legitimate used or e-editions. Happy hunting — once you snag a cheap copy, brewing a cup of tea and reading Hawking late at night is pure bliss.

Did hawking's book predict future cosmology discoveries?

3 Answers2025-09-04 11:49:55
Opening 'A Brief History of Time' felt like being handed a map with half the roads blurred — thrilling, and full of possibility. Hawking didn’t sit down in those pages and give a timetable for the next few decades of observational breakthroughs, but he did sketch out the big stakes and the conceptual doors that scientists should try pushing open. He popularized ideas like black hole radiation (which he derived in technical papers in the 1970s) and discussed the implications of singularity theorems and the Hartle–Hawking no-boundary proposal. Those are not calendar-style prophecies; they’re compass bearings that shaped where researchers pointed their telescopes and equations.

From my perspective, the real predictive power of his work was in setting agendas. Think about gravitational waves: Hawking’s books explained how general relativity makes bold, testable claims about spacetime dynamics, even if the direct detection by LIGO in 2015 wasn’t something he forecast in a year-by-year sense. Likewise, the accelerated expansion of the universe and the discovery of the cosmological constant’s importance were observational knocks that fit into frameworks he discussed, even if he didn’t predict the 1998 supernova results. Hawking’s discussions of black hole thermodynamics and information loss created long-running debates that drove theoretical progress; many of those debates led to new ideas like holography and renewed study of quantum gravity.

So, no — his popular books didn’t predict discoveries like an oracle. Yes — they highlighted the most interesting puzzles and sometimes pointed to observational consequences that later became central. For me, flipping through his pages was less about checking a prophecy and more about catching the curiosity bug that made me follow the real discoveries as they happened.

Related Searches

Popular Searches
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status