Long awaited, this textbook fills the gap for convincing concepts  to describe amorphous solids.
  Adopting a unique approach, the author develops a framework that  lays the foundations for a theory of amorphousness. He unravels the  scientific mysteries surrounding the topic, replacing rather vague  notions of amorphous materials as disordered crystalline solids  with the well-founded concept of ideal amorphous solids. A  classification of amorphous materials into inorganic glasses,  organic glasses, glassy metallic alloys, and thin films sets the  scene for the development of the model of ideal amorphous solids,  based on topology- and statistics-governed rules of  three-dimensional sphere packing, which leads to structures with no  short, mid or long-range order. This general model is then  concretized to the description of specific compounds in the four  fundamental classes of amorphous solids, as well as amorphous  polyethylene and poly(methyl)methacrylate, emphasizing its  versatility and descriptive power. Finally, he includes example  applications to indicate the abundance of amorphous materials in  modern-day technology, thus illustrating the importance of a better  understanding of their structure and properties.
  Equally ideal as supplementary reading in courses on  crystallography, mineralogy, solid state physics, and materials  science where amorphous materials have played only a minor role  until now.