In The Cosmic Cocktail, Professor Katie Freese offers a gripping first-person account of her life as a cosmologist. The recipe? Part memoir, part tutorial, part social commentary. Shaken, not stirred.--Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist, host of the television series Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey In prose as in life, Katherine Freese is never boring... Clear and accessible ... The Cosmic Cocktail is an excellent primer for the intrigued generalist, or for those who have spent too much time in particle-physics labs and want to catch up on what cosmologists are up to.--Francis Halzen, Nature Freese ... tells a lively personal tale of her trajectory through the world of science... You end up thinking that being a physicist is certainly important and definitely difficult--but it could also be a lot of fun.--Nancy Szokan, Washington Post This book blends two rather different flavours... First is the enormous excitement of working on a front-line problem in science... The other is the great fun Katie has had, and continues to have, being a female physicist... A number of other front-line particle physicists, cosmologists and so forth have also written up their versions of the dark matter story... But none of the other accounts I've read is more fun than The Cosmic Cocktail.--Virginia Trimble, Times Higher Education This is an important and thought-provoking book.--Shawn Donnan, Financial Times Freese's extensive research in this field, and her familiarity with many of the other key researchers in dark matter, helps give The Cosmic Cocktail a human touch: she sprinkles into the book anecdotes from her own career and meetings with other scientists throughout.--Jeff Foust, Space Review Physicist Katherine Freese drinks deep of her life's adventures and cosmic mysteries alike in her captivatingly frank book The Cosmic Cocktail. Why do tales of major scientific endeavours, told from the viewpoint of a single participant, rarely make captivating reading? Frankly, because few scientists are that interesting to the general public, and fewer still possess the trick of passionate engagement. Luckily, The Cosmic Cocktail is an exception... The Cosmic Cocktail is a refreshingly honest account of a frontier field where the author's enthusiasm and sense of fun shine through every page.--Marcus Chown, New Scientist Check out The Cosmic Cocktail to get an exciting look at the forefront of astrophysics!--Astro Guyz blog Freese successfully treads the line between assuming too much of her readers and missing out key aspects of the story to simplify it... [She] gives context and insight into a complex and fast-moving field.--Nicky Guttridge, BBC Sky at Night [I]f you have some science background and want to improve your overall understanding of the Universe without reaching for a textbook, this could be just the thing.--Ruth Angus, BBC Focus Magazine The story is fascinating, well told, and the balance, I think, is just right. This is a rapidly developing field of research.--Anthony Toole, Amazon.co.uk Freese is not the first scientist to delve into the mysteries of cosmology with a popular science book, but she seems to have the most fun doing it. It's as if she's sitting at a bar describing the cool stuff she studies every day... Interspersed with explanations chock-full of historical figures, numbers and acronyms are valuable insights into the human side of science.--Science News Freese's writing style interweaves anecdotes from her personal life with the scientific explanations... Especially on the topic of dark-matter detection, the book provides a valuable, nontechnical, and up-to-date overview.--Sabine Hossenfelder, Physics Today This new book covers in clear prose the fundamental knowledge underlying the present stage of dark matter physics. Anecdotes on the history of cosmology, including also adventures of the author, turn the book into an enjoyable reading.--Claudia-Veronika Meister, Zentralblatt MATH It's a very powerful book.--Pranav Sharma, Yash Pal Centre for Science and Technology Freese mixes a stiff drink, but it goes down smoothly.--Lisa Messeri, Journal for the History of Astronomy