The Blind Astronomer's Daughter
Autor John Pipkinen Limba Engleză Paperback – noi 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781632861894
ISBN-10: 1632861895
Pagini: 480
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1632861895
Pagini: 480
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
Based
on
the
real
life
of
William
Herschel,who
discovered
the
planet
Uranus,
as
well
as
moons
of
Uranus
and
Saturn.
(He
was
also
an
innovator
in
telescopes,
and
discovered
one
of
Saturn's
moons
in
his
first
night
of
observation
with
one
of
his
new
telescopes.)
He
was
appointed
George
III's
Court
Astronomer.
Notă biografică
John
Pipkinwas
born
in
Baltimore
and
received
his
Ph.D.
in
British
Literature
from
Rice
University.
His
first
novel,Woodsburner,
was
named
one
of
the
best
books
of
2009
by
theWashington
Post,
theChristian
Science
Monitor,
and
theSan
Francisco
Chronicle.
It
won
the
Massachusetts
Book
Award
for
Fiction,
the
Steven
Turner
Award
for
Best
Work
of
First
Fiction
from
the
Texas
Institute
of
Letters,
and
the
Center
for
Fiction
First
Novel
Prize.
Pipkin
lives
in
Austin,
Texas,
with
his
wife
and
son.
Recenzii
[The
novel's]
power
lies
in
its
vibrant
and
arresting
imagery,
resonant
themes
and
sense
of
intellectual
ferment.
In
his
extraordinary
ability
to
convey
his
characters'
emotions
as
they
take
in
the
universe's
immensity,
Pipkin
captures
our
own
awe
and
sense
of
puniness
as
we
look
at
the
skies
and
the
'implacable
cartwheeling
of
worlds
slow
and
indifferent'.
A lyrical and heavenly read. . . it is a novel to be savoured and not rushed
You want characters as vivid as the people you share your pub with? This novel has them. You want a primer to the historical underpinnings of modern astronomy and the socioeconomic environment in which it flourished? It's here. A view of the late-18th-century Irish uprising as viscerally depicted as, say,Saving Private Ryan? Look no further. A tempestuous love story? Bingo. How about a glimmer of clockpunk gearcraft within the fearsome engine of story? Roger that, citizen: John Pipkin has devised a brilliant orrery of life's rich pageant, as compelling as the brightest arrangement of stars beneath the vault of heaven.
InThe Blind Astronomer's Daughter,John Pipkin, one of our most accomplished novelists, gives us a universe of stars, comets, and planets half-perceived through crude telescopes and half-deduced through calculations. Utilizing history and imagination, Pipkin creates characters--most memorably two complex and touching women, both called Caroline--who are formed by both their innate gifts and a world flawed by violence and injustice. He brings them all together with a force as effective and inclusive as gravity.
The Blind Astronomer's Daughteris a tour de force of characterization and historical narrative . . . No matter how small, the characters and the time come alive in narrative that is rich, intense and meticulously rendered that it often comes across as lyrical or philosophical.
A lyrical and heavenly read. . . it is a novel to be savoured and not rushed
You want characters as vivid as the people you share your pub with? This novel has them. You want a primer to the historical underpinnings of modern astronomy and the socioeconomic environment in which it flourished? It's here. A view of the late-18th-century Irish uprising as viscerally depicted as, say,Saving Private Ryan? Look no further. A tempestuous love story? Bingo. How about a glimmer of clockpunk gearcraft within the fearsome engine of story? Roger that, citizen: John Pipkin has devised a brilliant orrery of life's rich pageant, as compelling as the brightest arrangement of stars beneath the vault of heaven.
InThe Blind Astronomer's Daughter,John Pipkin, one of our most accomplished novelists, gives us a universe of stars, comets, and planets half-perceived through crude telescopes and half-deduced through calculations. Utilizing history and imagination, Pipkin creates characters--most memorably two complex and touching women, both called Caroline--who are formed by both their innate gifts and a world flawed by violence and injustice. He brings them all together with a force as effective and inclusive as gravity.
The Blind Astronomer's Daughteris a tour de force of characterization and historical narrative . . . No matter how small, the characters and the time come alive in narrative that is rich, intense and meticulously rendered that it often comes across as lyrical or philosophical.