"Professor Werner has produced a scholarly volume full of fascinating facts and insights into many of the key developments and episodes in the growth of our knowledge of organometallic chemistry. Stories of the development of experimental and theoretical topics are presented and interwoven with an insight attributable to the extensive personal knowledge and experiences of the author. I recommend this book as a valuable contribution to scholarship and as a jolly good read." -Malcolm L.H. Green, FRS, Department of Chemistry, Oxford University
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"An account of major (and many minor) discoveries and aspects of organotransition metal chemistry from a personal and historical perspective. ... this book being primarily of interest to advanced level students (undergraduate and graduate), faculty, and practicing chemists, particularly in the inorganic and, to a lesser extent, organic fields. It could be a useful and unique resource for courses in the inorganic and organometallic areas because of its historical and biographical information and perspectives. I found it well-written, interesting, and enjoyable reading." (Kenneth M. Nicholas, Journal of Chemical Education, Vol. 86 (12), December, 2009)
"Landmarks in Organo-Transition Metal Chemistry - A Personal View ... is a very informative and exciting account of the historical development of organo-transition-metal chemistry from the 19th century up to the present. ... It is not only the comprehensive description ... of organo-transition-metal compounds that makes this book so valuable for chemists and advanced students, but also the many references to original publications, the descriptive figures, and the scores of images ... that make the book by Helmut Werner so valuable, worth reading, and unique." (Alexander Filippou, Angewandte Chemie, Vol. 48, 2009)
"In a book that is neither wholly text nor wholly biographical, the reader is taken on a journey through the history of organometallic chemistry. Necessarily focusing on some areas in which the author has personally conducted research, the book is full of fascinating insights into the development of one of the largest subdivisions of chemistry. Despite the wealth of content, the book is remarkably easy to read and emphasizes the rapid growth of the subject area and the influence it has had on chemistry, both in the past and continuing into the future." ("On Our Bookshelf" section, Nature Chemistry, Vol. 1, 2009)