"Rigor Mortis effectively illustrates what can happen when a convergence of social, cultural, and scientific forces, as well as basic human motivation, conspires to create a real crisis of confidence in the research process."--SCIENCE
"[An] easy-reading but hard-hitting expose..."--Kirkus
Named one of PRI/SCIENCE FRIDAY's "Best Science Books of 2017"
"Richard Harris's elegant and compelling dissection of scientific research is must-reading for anyone seeking to understand today's troubled research enterprise-and how to save it."
--Deborah Blum, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and Director of the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT
"This behind-the-scenes look at biomedical research will appeal to students and academics. A larger audience of impacted patients and taxpayers will also find this critical review fascinating and alarming. Highly recommended for public and academic libraries."--Library Journal
"Rigor Mortis provides an excellent summation of the case for fixing science."--SLATE
"Rigor Mortis is rife with examples of things that go awry in medical studies, how they happen, and how they can be avoided and fixed. For the most part, academic biomedical scientists are not evil, malicious, or liars at heart."--Ars Technica
"A rewarding read for anyone who wants to know the unvarnished truth about how science really gets done."--Financial Times
"An alarming and highly readable summation of what has been called the 'reproducibility crisis' in science--the growing realization that large swathes of the biomedical literature may be wrong."--Spectrum Magazine
"Harris makes a strong case that the biomedical research culture is seriously in need of repair."--Nature
"Just as 'post-truth' was selected as the word of the year in 2016 for its political connotations, Richard Harris masterfully shows how this pertains to science, too. Rigor Mortis is a compelling, sobering, and important account of bad biomedical research, and the pressing need to fix a broken culture."
--Eric Topol, Director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute and author of The Patient Will See You Now
"Richard Harris has written an essential guide to how scientific research may arrive at the wrong conclusions. From the 235 ways that scientists can fool themselves to the misuse of statistics and the persistence of unsound research methods, Harris outlines the problems underlying the so-called 'reproducibility crisis' in biomedical research and introduces readers to the people working on solutions."--Christie Aschwanden, lead science writer for FiveThirtyEight and health columnist for the Washington Post
"Science remains the best way to build knowledge and improve health, but as Richard Harris reminds us in Rigor Mortis, it is also carried out by humans subject to 'publish or perish' and other perverse incentives. Tapping into these tensions, Harris deftly weaves gripping tales of sleuthing with possible paths out of what some call a crisis. Read this book if you want to see how biomedical research is reviving itself."--Ivan Oransky, Co-Founder of Retraction Watch and Distinguished Writer In Residence at New York University
"This engaging book will inform and challenge readers who care about the public image of science, the state of peer review, and US funding for science."--Physics Today
Named by Amazon as one of their "Best Nonfiction Books of the Month"