'The Origin and Nature of Life on Earth reads more like a well-executed textbook, one that covers much of what you need to know to jump in and start researching the origins of life. ... For physicists wishing to dive headfirst into the origin-of-life field, this book is a great place to start ... the book is not merely a compendium of existing knowledge; it offers genuinely new perspectives. [The authors] turn scientists' conventional origin stories on their heads. Rather than focus strictly on the chemical origin of life, they regard life as a planetary process ... they introduce the idea of life as a 'fourth geosphere' that complements the other three: the atmosphere, hydrosphere, and lithosphere. In so doing, they make the problem of the origin of life one that may be tractable for physicists, and they lay out a possible framework for how to do it.' Sara I. Walker, Physics Today
'For those interested in an easy-to-follow introduction to this fascinating topic ...' Graham Godfrey, The Biologist
"... the most significant book on the origin of life hitherto written."
Walter Fontana, Harvard Medical School
"This is a truly unusual work of scholarship, which offers both novel perspectives on a huge range of disciplines and a model of scientific synthesis. This is a remarkable, and remarkably impressive, book."
Cosma Shalizi, Carnegie Mellon University
"... an exceptionally important, highly original, unique scientific contribution ..."
Elbert Branscomb, University of Illinois