Alan Fersht has revised his classic text Structure
and Mechanism (Freeman, 1985) and extended it to include
applications of the protein engineering method to characterizing
transition states in protein folding and enzyme catalysis.
His earlier textbook was so good it scared off possible
competitors, and its notable features are preserved in
the new text. It provides enough information about techniques
to make close connections between discussions of mechanism
and actual data. It packs an amazing amount of information
and viewpoint into a short space without losing readability.
It does not just derive equations, it explains their physical
meanings and it aims to develop the reader's physical
insight. The assumptions behind an approach are laid out
clearly and, when a topic is controversial, the author
gives his own viewpoint at the end. The pace of research
today is such that few leading scientists find time to
write textbooks, and the scientific community is surely
grateful to Alan Fersht for revising his. However, as he
points out, a main section of the book covering classical
enzymology has not been revised.