Best Science Books of 2025 | Science News’ Picks

Science News ‍Staff 2025-11-20 18:00:00

Our staff’s‍ favorite ⁢books of the year pondered science’s ​role⁢ in some‌ of society’s most pressing issues, from⁣ AI to childhood trauma‍ to ⁤river restoration. Did we ⁢miss your favorite?⁣ Let ​us know at [email protected].

Rehab

Shoshana Walter
Simon & Schuster | $29.99

In a journalist’s exposé of U.S. drug⁢ treatment centers, stories of people who ‌participated in rehab programs unveil how barriers to access⁢ and sometimes ⁤unethical practices can impede recovery from addiction.

Read our ‌review ​| Buy Rehab from ​Bookshop.org


The book ⁤cover of Shadows Into Light with the shadows ​of four figures against a ​orange ⁤and blue-ish‍ sky.

Shadows Into ​Light

Theresa S.Betancourt
Harvard ‌Univ. | $35

A long-term study followed the lives of ‍children forced to fight in Sierra Leone’s ‌civil war from 1991 to 2002. The research​ revealed trauma’s effects on their psychosocial advancement and the⁢ factors that have helped​ some former child soldiers recover.

Read⁤ our review ⁣ | ​Buy Shadows Into Light from Bookshop.org


The book cover‌ of a Black ‌Religion in the Madhouse, showing ⁤people seated at tables⁤ in a room.

Black Religion ​in the Madhouse

Judith Weisenfeld
NYU ​Press | $35

After slavery’s abolition and the U.S. ​Civil War, white psychiatrists pathologized Black ‌religious practices as ​mental illness. A historian of ‍religion ‌unpacks how these racist views shaped⁣ the burgeoning field of psychiatry.

Buy Black Religion in the Madhouse from Bookshop.org


The book cover of‍ The Salmon Cannon and the Levitating Frog, showing ⁢a leaping frog ‌on​ a blue‍ background.

The ⁤Salmon‍ Cannon‍ and the Levitating Frog 

Carly⁣ Anne York
Basic Books⁣ | $30

An animal physiologist makes a case for the value of basic science:⁣ Curiosity-driven research, which‌ seeks⁣ to understand how the world works, may not always‍ have foreseeable applications but ‍could lead to unexpected benefits.

Read‌ our review | Buy The Salmon Cannon and ‍the Levitating Frog ⁤from Bookshop.org


The book cover of Everything Is‌ <a href=Tuberculosis,⁣ showing a⁢ droplet-like‍ illustration on a yellow background.” class=”wp-image-3152281″ style=”width:196px” srcset=”https://i0.wp.com/www.sciencenews.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/040125_at_everything-is-tb_cover.jpg?w=680&ssl=1 680w, https://i0.wp.com/www.sciencenews.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/040125_at_everything-is-tb_cover.jpg?resize=254%2C383&ssl=1 254w, https://i0.wp.com/www.sciencenews.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/040125_at_everything-is-tb_cover.jpg?resize=298%2C450&ssl=1 298w, https://i0.wp.com/www.sciencenews.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/040125_at_everything-is-tb_cover.jpg?resize=123%2C186&ssl=1 123w, https://i0.wp.com/www.sciencenews.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/040125_at_everything-is-tb_cover.jpg?resize=384%2C580&ssl=1 384w, https://i0.wp.com/www.sciencenews.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/040125_at_everything-is-tb_cover.jpg?resize=514%2C776&ssl=1 514w” sizes=”auto, (max-width: 680px) 100vw, 680px”/>

Everything is Tuberculosis 

John ⁢Green
Crash Course books‍ | $28

Tuberculosis is one of the world’s deadliest‍ infectious‌ diseases despite available treatments and cures.In an examination of the‌ medical and social history of the disease, a famous ‍author builds a ⁣case for⁢ how ⁣modern social injustice sustains it.

Read our review | Buy Everything is Tuberculosis from Bookshop.org


The book cover of The Water‍ Remembers, showing a woman‍ standing against a backdrop of water and⁤ land.

the Water ⁣Remembers

amy Bowers Cordalis
Little, Brown & Co. | $30

A Yurok tribal member ⁢and⁢ attorney recounts her family’s​ role in the fight to remove dams from the ‍Klamath River in the U.S. Northwest.‍ The Indigenous-led effort to restore the river’s ⁤ecosystems culminated in the world’s largest dam removal project thus far.

Read our review | Buy The Water Remembers from⁤ Bookshop.org


The book cover of A Year‌ With the Seals, showing a seal swimming among seaweed.

A Year⁣ With the Seals

Alix Morris
Algonquin⁣ Books ⁣ | $30

Seal populations in⁤ North America have rebounded⁢ from the brink of extinction⁢ over the last century. A ‌science journalist ​investigates how the growing number⁤ of seals has sparked tension‌ in coastal communities.

Read⁤ our review | buy A Year With the Seals from ⁤bookshop.org


The book cover of The martians, ‌with a red ‍background showing headlines⁢ from various media​ types.

The Martians

David ⁣Baron
Liveright ​ | $29.99

Reports of “canals” on​ Mars​ in the late 1800s ​and early 1900s ignited⁢ a ​craze about the possibility of intelligent⁤ life there. A ⁤journalist⁣ retraces how the canal theory infiltrated public consciousness and shaped astronomy.

Read our review ‌| Buy The Martians from Bookshop.org


The book ⁤cover ⁤of More Everything Forever, against a space-looking background.

More Everything Forever

Adam Becker
Basic​ Books |⁣ $32

Tech billionaires‌ envision‍ a future in which ⁣humankind, served by superintelligent AI, lives in an ⁢ever-growing society in outer space. This ⁣sci-fi‌ future, while ⁣seductive, is implausible and ethically fraught, ‌a​ scientist journalist argues.

Read⁤ our review | Buy More Everything Forever from Bookshop.org


The book cover of ⁤Tales ​of Militant Chemistry showing the silhouette of a film factory over a ‍black and⁢ green background

Tales of​ Militant Chemistry

Alice Lovejoy
Univ. of California Press | $27.95

A media and⁣ cultural historian ⁢unfurls how film giant ⁤Kodak ⁤used⁢ its chemical engineering expertise to ⁣support​ the‍ United States’ weapons manufacturing — including⁤ the ⁢creation of the ⁤first atomic bombs — during ​the two‌ world wars.

Read our review | buy Tales of Militant Chemistry from‌ Bookshop.org

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