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Moss has included most, but not all, of the words that frequently baffle one side or the other. On the plus side, there are some wonderful anecdotes in here--such as one in the "Yankee" entry, about a Brit who mentioned to his Tennessee hosts that he'd seen a lot of Yankee money and enterprise down in Mexico, to be greeted by a cool silence and finally the resentful retort: "Well, I bet there's some rebel money and rebel enterprise down there too." If you don't understand what the problem was, you need this book.
On the other side of the ledger, however, the book is incomplete. Naturally it is missing some very recent slang, such as the very new British use of "pants" as a synonym for "naff" (which he *does* define); but it is also missing some words and phrases I'd have fully expected to find here: fortnight, counterpane, and "Bob's your uncle" on the British side; cobbler and punt on the American side, just as examples.
There are also some entries which, though sometimes entertaining, are not well attributed or are out of date. The use of "scrump" for pilfering fruit from fruit trees is one I never heard in the UK; it is almost certainly local to the West Country, where scrumpy (apple cider) is the local moonshine; similarly, "taproom" is a word I knew from literature but never ran into in real life. On the American side, there are occasional oddities that are perhaps regional: "locate" meaning to find a job doesn't square with what I've heard here in Texas, nor does "frog", for the crossing plate on a railway, seem like an entry that deserved its place.
Still, with these flaws, it's a fun reference book to have. Perhaps (and it's not really a criticism) it's really more entertaining than it is useful.
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Although the topic of the book is highly complex, Moss writes in a journalist's style that is easy to understand even if the reader knows nothing about physics. Moss also examines the human side of the issue-offering a glimpse of the life of a British bomber pilot, the concerns of an otherwise law-abiding grandmother who has been arrested numerous times for anti-nuke demonstrations, and a look inside an American missile silo.
A professor recommended this book to my class. I sought it out and have read it twice. It is very eye-opening , especially the information on how devastating the nuclear forces of the Cold War nations were. A case study of the Radiation Subcommittee determined one Russian nuclear attack would kill 28% of the U.S. population. Of course, this book was written over 30 years ago, so imagine how dangerous it would become and still may be! As Moss states in his conclusion, from the moment we gained the knowledge to produce nukes, they remain a permanent aspect of human culture. The info in this book will never be obsolete as is evident in the latest rush to build shelters in this latest time of chemical warfare.