From the reviews:
The book is a good read. It style is chatty, with entertaining anecdotes. It is nicely produced, with clear maps and diagrams ... extensive references and a helpful index. (Times Higher Education, January, 2010)
Vladimir Rubtsov has clearly spent an enormous amount of time researching the event, delving into eyewitness accounts and scientific publications alike, and documenting the many excursions made to the epicentre of the blast ... which were made in an attempt to find fragments of the exploding body. ... throughout he presents an unbiased account of all lines of investigation that have occurred to the present day, allowing the reader to draw their own conclusions. (Emily Baldwin, Astronomy Now, February, 2010)
In this authoritative and engaging account, the Russian scientist and philosopher Vladimir Rubtsov - a longtime participant in the Tunguska debate - offers few definitive answers ... . he provides a compelling account of how the scientific complexity of the Tunguska problem has combined with various external difficulties - including two world wars and decades of Soviet dysfunction - to create a riddle that still defies solution after more than a century of research. (Physics World, February, 2010)
Vladimir Rubtsov gives a sober account of this extraordinary event, clearly debunking myths while emphasising the unknowns. ... Rubstov draws attention to strange lights seen in the sky for days before the impact, comparing them with similar observations in 1910 ... . An instructive read about an enduring mystery. (Stuart Clark, Physics World, February, 2010)
This book is a history of scientific investigations of the 1908 Tunguska event in the former Soviet Union. ... The book's interesting content combined with its low price and high-quality paper makes it a worthwhile purchase. Summing Up: Recommended. Academic, professional, and public libraries, all levels. (M. S. Field, Choice, Vol. 47 (7), March, 2010)
The most thorough English-language examinations of the little-understood Tunguska event of June 30, 1908-the devastating aerial explosion over the Siberian forest ... . analyzes the extensive Russian research ... from the first Soviet expedition in 1921 to a series of centennial conferences in 2008 and looks at the anomalies atmospheric phenomena both before and after the event, the atypical features of the aerial object seen by some 500. (C&RL News, December, 2010)