Sims, Michael 1958-
SIMS, Michael 1958-
PERSONAL:
Male. Born 1958.
ADDRESSES:
Home—Nashville, TN. Agent—c/o Author Mail, Viking/Penguin Putnam, 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014.
CAREER:
Author and freelance journalist. Worked at various jobs, including former researcher of rare books and manuscripts at Vanderbilt University.
WRITINGS:
Darwin's Orchestra: An Almanac of Nature in History and the Arts, Henry Holt (New York, NY), 1997.
Adam's Navel: A Natural and Cultural History of the Human Form, Viking (New York, NY), 2003.
Author of articles about science, culture, and the arts for various publications.
SIDELIGHTS:
Michael Sims is a freelance journalist who writes about culture and science. Growing up in the small town of Crossville, Tennessee, he began his reputation as a writer, observer, and interpreter of unusual facts when he was almost totally bedridden by an unknown illness at the age of thirteen. "I read steadily, of course, first science fiction and mysteries," Sims told Alden Mudge of BookPage.com, "then science fiction led me to science-related nonfiction." As he grew older, Sims's reading began to encompass fiction and poetry, ultimately leading into what he has called "the border habitat where science, nature and culture meet."
Sims's first book, Darwin's Orchestra: An Almanac of Nature in History and the Arts, was published in 1997. Composed of 366 brief essays—one for each day of the year, including February 29—the book focuses on strange occurrences, anecdotes, or beliefs about science dating from 4004 B.C. to modern times. Darwin's Orchestra discusses everything from dinosaur eggs to the scientific aspects of the Star Trek television series. Sims also includes a variety of real and fictional people, from Wolfgang Mozart and Virginia Woolf to Sherlock Holmes and Batman. The book's title refers to an experiment in which Charles Darwin, the famous founder of the theory of evolution, and his family played bassoon, whistle, and piano to earthworms to see if they would react to music. Writing in Science Books & Films, Charles C. Kolb called the book "enjoyable reading" and noted that it is "certain to amuse and appeal to scholars, teachers, students, and the general public." Library Journal contributor Bruce D. Neville noted that "this is a book to be savored."
Sims did not begin another book until he suffered a herniated disk and had an operation that left him flat on his back for two weeks. As he was recuperating, he thought about the human body and began taking notes on whatever came to mind. Sims's notes ultimately led to his 2003 book, Adam's Navel: A Natural and Cultural History of the Human Form, which Judith Warner of the Washington Post called "a quite remarkable compendium of fact, fantasy, myth, and personal musings on the topic of the human body." Focusing almost entirely on external body parts, Sims writes about everything from an in-depth investigation of the human bellybutton and the female breast to men's and women's "privy parts," as he titles one chapter. His wide-ranging thoughts about the human body are typified by his discussion of the hand, in which he talks about everything from carpal tunnel syndrome to the evolution of the handshake, the history of fingerprinting, and the cultural bias against people who are left-handed.
Although reviewers almost universally praised Sims's ability to turn a phrase in Adam's Navel, some reviewers found the book too much like a list that glosses over information without applying any real philosophical or in-depth thought to the subject at hand. For example, reviewing the book for National Public Radio's All Things Considered, David Kipen reported that Sims has a certain amount of wit but also noted that "Adam's Navel is just a lint catcher for whatever disposable bits of fluff each body part reminds the author of." Other reviewers found the book both entertaining and insightful. A Publishers Weekly contributor commented, "it all adds up to a rollicking 'fantastic voyage' over the surface of the body." Ian Sansom, writing in the Guardian, stated, "Adam's Navel is that rare thing, a work genuinely wide-eyed and innocent, amazed at everything." Noting that Sims's book is heavier in its sense of breadth than depth, New York Times Book Review contributor John Banville commented, "This is an entertaining, witty and erudite jackdaw's nest of a book." He also noted, "If at times he sounds like the worst bore in the bar, he will quickly re-grab the reader's flagging attention with some new bizarre fact or fragment of arcana."
BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES:
PERIODICALS
Booklist, March 1, 1997, Gilbert Taylor, review of Darwin's Orchestra: An Almanac of Nature in History and the Arts, p. 1106.
Entertainment Weekly, August 1, 2003, Wook Kim, review of Adam's Navel: A Natural and Cultural History of the Human Form, p. 83.
Guardian (Manchester, England), September 27, 2003, Ian Sansom, review of Adam's Navel.
Kirkus Reviews, May 15, 2003, review of Adam's Navel, p. 740.
Library Journal, February 15, 1997, Bruce D. Neville, review of Darwin's Orchestra, p. 160; July, 2003, Michael D. Cramer, review of Adam's Navel, p. 118.
New York Times Book Review, July 27, 2003, John Banville, "The Anatomy Lesson," p. 5.
Publishers Weekly, May 12, 2003, review of Adam's Navel, p. 55.
Science Books & Films, June, 1997, Charles C. Kolb, review of Darwin's Orchestra, p. 140; October, 1997, review of Darwin's Orchestra, p. 219.
Washington Post, October 5, 2003, Judith Warner, "Three Books Plumb the Perennial, Unstable Mysteries of Physical Being and Identity," section T, p5.
ONLINE
BookPage.com,http://www.bookpage.com/ (June 21, 2004), Alden Mudge, "Anatomy Lessons."
OTHER
National Public Radio, August 20, 2003, David Kipen, "All Things Considered" (transcript), review of Adam's Navel: A Natural and Cultural History of the Human Form.*