Keating is critical of the way that Nobel Prizes are organized, saying that "No scientist arrives alone in Stockholm." He has written two books on the topic. The Nobel Prize was a motivating factor in Keating's career due to his academic rivalry with his father.
Losing The Nobel Prize (2018) Keating published his first book ''Losing the Nobel Prize: A Story of Cosmology, Ambition, and the Perils of Science's Highest Honor'' on April 24, 2018. The book describes the
BICEP and
BICEP2 experiments, which were located at the South Pole and were devised to detect and map the polarization of the cosmic microwave background radiation leftover from the
Big Bang. BICEP2's data showed strong polarization signals that were announced to be cosmological in origin, but were later shown by
Planck satellite data to be caused by polarized interstellar dust. The first part of the book describes the background behind
cosmological inflation, and the second covers BICEP2. The third section focuses on Keating's issues with the Nobel Prize, including lack of diversity in the recipients, that the prize cannot be awarded posthumously, the maximum of three laureates per prize, which excludes larger groups from receiving it, and the secrecy around nominations. According to Keating, all of these "reward an outdated version of science", and "better science comes from inclusivity, collaboration, and innovation". He argues that the science Nobel Prizes have strayed from the original intent of
Alfred Nobel's will, and may hinder scientific progress by fostering unnecessary, and sometimes destructive, competition. He proposed that half a Nobel prize should go to the leaders of a collaboration, with the other half awarded to the rest of the team of scientists working on the project.
Into the Impossible (2021) His second book,
Into the Impossible, was published in 2021. It features interviews with Nobel Prize winners
Adam Riess,
Rainer Weiss,
Sheldon Glashow,
Carl Wieman,
Roger Penrose,
Duncan Haldane,
Frank Wilczek,
John C. Mather and
Barry Barish. == Personal life ==