An edition of Marie Curie (1995)

Marie Curie

a life

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 15, 2024 | History
An edition of Marie Curie (1995)

Marie Curie

a life

  • 14 Want to read
  • 1 Currently reading

In this stunning and richly textured new biography, Susan Quinn presents us with a far more complicated picture of the woman we thought we knew. Drawing on family documents, Quinn sheds new light on the tragic losses and patriotic passion that infused Marie Sklodowska Curie's early years in Poland.

And through access to Marie Curie's journal, closed to researchers until 1990, we hear in her own words of the intimacy and joy of her marriage to Pierre Curie and the depth of her despair at his premature death.

The image of Marie Curie as the grieving widow, attired always in black, is familiar to many of us. Much less well known is the affair with a married colleague that helped her recover from her loss. The testimonials of friends, hitherto unavailable, lend this love story a sometimes painful immediacy.

Marie Curie's public triumphs are well known: she was the first woman to receive a Nobel Prize and one of the few people, to date, to receive a second. Unknown or barely known are the defeats she suffered: her rejection by the French Academy and her public humiliation at the hands of the French press over her love affair.

As a scientist, Marie Curie has always been associated with the discovery of radium and polonium. But in fact more important than her work in isolating new elements was her idea that radioactivity was "an atomic process." Susan Quinn's biography provides a closer look at Marie Curie's work, and at the discoveries that led up to it and flowed from it.

We come away understanding that Marie Curie was important but not singular: one of a small group of brilliant scientists whose combined efforts brought us to our current understanding of the material universe.

Publish Date
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Language
English
Pages
509

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Marie Curie.
Marie Curie.
March 1, 1999, Insel, Frankfurt
Hardcover in German
Cover of: Marie Curie
Marie Curie: a life
1996, Addison-Wesley
in English
Cover of: Marie Curie
Marie Curie: a life
1996, Mandarin
in English
Cover of: Marie Curie
Marie Curie
August 1995, William Heinemann Ltd
Cover of: Marie Curie
Marie Curie: a life
1995, Simon & Schuster
Hardcover in English
Cover of: Marie Curie
Marie Curie: a life
1995, Heinemann
in English
Cover of: Marie Curie
Marie Curie: a life
Publisher unknown

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Book Details


Table of Contents

A family with convictions
A double life
Some very hard days
A precious sense of liberty
A beautiful thing
Everything hoped for
Discovery
A theory of matter
The prize
Turning toward home
Desolation and despair
A new alchemy
Rejection
Scandal
Recovery
Serving France
America
A thousand bonds
Legacies

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. [479]-484) and index.

Published in
New York

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
540/.92, B
Library of Congress
QD22.C8 Q56 1995

The Physical Object

Format
Hardcover
Pagination
509 p.
Number of pages
509
Dimensions
24 x x centimeters

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1117364M
Internet Archive
mariecurielife00quin
ISBN 10
0671675427
ISBN 13
9780671675424
LCCN
94043517
OCLC/WorldCat
31604678
Library Thing
792198
Goodreads
3134782

Work Description

In this stunning and richly textured new biography, Susan Quinn presents us with a far more complicated picture of the woman we thought we knew. Drawing on family documents, Quinn sheds new light on the tragic losses and patriotic passion that infused Marie Sklodowska Curie's early years in Poland. And through access to Marie Curie's journal, closed to researchers until 1990, we hear in her own words of the intimacy and joy of her marriage to Pierre Curie and the depth of her despair at his premature death. The image of Marie Curie as the grieving widow, attired always in black, is familiar to many of us. Much less well known is the affair with a married colleague that helped her recover from her loss. The testimonials of friends, hitherto unavailable, lend this love story a sometimes painful immediacy. Marie Curie's public triumphs are well known: she was the first woman to receive a Nobel Prize and one of the few people, to date, to receive a second. Unknown or barely known are the defeats she suffered: her rejection by the French Academy and her public humiliation at the hands of the French press over her love affair. As a scientist, Marie Curie has always been associated with the discovery of radium and polonium. But in fact more important than her work in isolating new elements was her idea that radioactivity was "an atomic process." Susan Quinn's biography provides a closer look at Marie Curie's work, and at the discoveries that led up to it and flowed from it. We come away understanding that Marie Curie was important but not singular: one of a small group of brilliant scientists whose combined efforts brought us to our current understanding of the material universe.

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History

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