I think like most children, I got interested in nature very early. And then by reading a little book called The Young Chemist by Sherwood Taylor, I got interested in actually doing chemical experiments. So I started my career as a garage chemist, buying chemicals from the local pharmacist and making things according to the prescriptions then, and going forward to more experiments, just on that basis. I then started — still while I was at school — extracting pigments from petals and just doing really cookbook chemistry, on that basis.[6]
Books
F. Sherwood Taylor wrote many books on the history of alchemy and chemistry in particular, and also of science in general:[7][8]
^"Review of Galileo and the Freedom of Thought by F. Sherwood Taylor". Popular Astronomy. 47: 231. 1939. Bibcode:1939PA.....47..231T.
^Glass, Bentley (June 1947). "Review of Science, Past and Present by F. Sherwood Taylor". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 22 (2): 143. doi:10.1086/395706.
^MacCarthy, F. L. (1946). "Review of The Fourfold Vision by F. Sherwood Taylor". Religion and Science. Religion in Education. 13 (2): 59–60. doi:10.1080/4608556646; published by Taylor & Francis Online, 25 Feb. 2011{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
^Grenell, R. G. (December 1953). "Review of The Alchemists: Founders of Modern Chemistry by F. Sherwood Taylor". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 28 (4): 405–406. doi:10.1086/399864.