Obsessive Genius: the Inner World of Marie Curie Pdf, Epub, Ebook

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Obsessive Genius: the Inner World of Marie Curie Pdf, Epub, Ebook OBSESSIVE GENIUS: THE INNER WORLD OF MARIE CURIE PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Barbara Goldsmith | 272 pages | 09 Jun 2006 | WW Norton & Co | 9780393327489 | English | New York, United States Obsessive Genius: The Inner World of Marie Curie PDF Book It was shocking, though not surprising, to read how her contributions were ignored by the Nobel committee. The intensity of her passion for science, unfortunately, cost her time with her children, creating rifts, especially with the youngest one. Mail will not be published required. Great read that is hard to put down. Place Published New York. Sometimes books go on and on and you drown in the details, but not here. About Barbara Goldsmith. There is also some commentary from Goldsmith, towards the end, about what drew her to Marie Curie in the first place. So admired her spunk, because she basically had to fight every step of the way the prejudices of the time. While her work won her two Nobel Prizes and transformed our world, it did not liberate her from the prejudices of either the male-dominated scientific community or society. Eliza Foss does a good job narrating the book. She never received much in the way of formal treatment for her depressive episodes. Massie pdf. I really enjoyed this book and learned so much not only about Madame Curie but also about the scientific world of the 19th and early 20th century. In fact, the Curie clothing and papers are still to this day radioactive! Daniel H. Also thought she did a very good job, mixing their health, their home and their work. Shelves: She was a physicist and chemist and studied radioactivity. She suffered greatly after her husband died and even blamed herself for his death. Doc theme by Theme Museum. From the intellectual history perspective, it's fascinating to read about the time when knowledge that the average high school student today takes for granted was still being debated. Even though this isn't the world's most scintillating prose, I had to give this book 4 stars because I so liked the bizarre hype around radioactivity that "the upper crust carried Straight-forward chronicle of Maria Curie's life and family. When Marie was only four, her mother began to succumb to tuberculosis. Seven years later, her mother and an older sister had both fallen to tuberculosis. When that took too much time, she hired a wet nurse, then passed much of the child-care duty to her widowed father, who joined her household. The Curie myth had its own rewards. Also explains a lot about how she formatted the book and why she wrote it the way she did. However, her role modeling in "fighting" depression should not include the avoidance of effective therapy. Buy It Now. Previous to reading this book, I knew only the basics regarding Marie Curie. She and Pierre Curie fell in love over his invention, the quadrant electrometer, in the Parisian industrial college where he worked. However, when she became a mother, she was so obsessed with her research that she did not mother her own children very much. The book showed her as very focused on her work to the near-total exclusion of her children and her social life. Could Marie Curie have achieved so much without the depression? Even though this isn't the world's most scintillating prose, I had to give this book 4 stars because I so liked the bizarre hype around radioactivity that "the upper crust carried vials of radium bromide in their pockets or purses"! Of course they didn't realize the risks, but it really made an impression on my how many dangerous things skipped under the radar before regulation and the Food and Drug administration. I finished this and thought it was very good, maybe quite simply because Marie Curie had such an interesting life, rather than the author's writing skills. She lived in Warsaw which was owned by Russia. Meine Mediathek Hilfe Erweiterte Buchsuche. Obsessive Genius: The Inner World of Marie Curie Writer That rant aside, this is a terrific account of Curie's life, with equal time given to her family and background and to her science. As such, Curie comes off as two dimensional martyr for historical currents that happen to interest Goldsmith She was a genius whose contributions helped change the world--but look at the price she paid! Friend Reviews. She died on 3 July of aplastic pernicious anemia caused by radium radiation. What mattered was to get back to the lab. Marie Curie, born Marya Sklodowska in Warsaw in , of scholarly parents of modest means, married in Paris in Shit like this pisses me off. Massie pdf. Lists with This Book. Did installation of her daughter as director of the Curie Institute indicate good scientific judgment or nepotism? Through family interviews, diaries, letters, and workbooks that had been sealed for over sixty years, Barbara Goldsmith reveals the Marie Curie behind the myth—an all-too-human woman struggling to balance a spectacular scientific career, a demanding family, the prejudice of society, and her own passionate nature. The book showed her as very focused on her work to the near-total exclusion of her children and her social life. Though much of the lore surrounding the beginnings of the fields of radiology and nuclear medicine was already known to me from my medical education and professional training, this book still had much to teach me: for example, I hadn't previously been aware that Marie Curie was intimate friends with Hertha Ayrton, the inspiration for the character of Mirah in George Eliot's Daniel Deronda and a strong scientist and feminist in her own right. I thought maybe I would get bogged down with all the chemistry and physics involved, but the author gave us a clear and concise explanation, one that was not too difficult to follow. She died in , and French women were not able to vote until after the Second World War. Search for:. Barbara Goldsmith. Curie's shrewd though controversial insight was that radioactivity was an atomic property that could be used to discover new elements. The scientific questions that Marie and Pierre Curie investigated are explained in a way that makes them easy to understand, even for lay readers. Goldsmith covers primarily the hatred, bigotry and prejudice Curie had to overcome rather than on her scientific discoveries. The facts of a working woman's life in the late 19th century speak for themselves. This is an easy read, about pages, and serves as a good introduction to Curie and her work - which is described at a very high level, with no in-depth explanation of the science. But at least the works themselves were true. Obsessive genius: the inner world of Marie Curie , a biography by Barbara Goldsmith, appears at a time when women are still underrepresented in most fields of science. E-mail the JCI. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. It shows her genius and her human frailties both. I am 11 years old and I found this book exquisitely good for any biography projects. She went to Paris and got her degrees at the Sorbonne and then spent most of her life in France. Marie Curie discovered polonium, radium and radioactivity. Summary This biography begins on April 20, when the ashes of Marie and Pierre Curie were transferred from their graves in a Paris suburb and re-interred in the Pantheon, thereby placing the Curies among the "immortals" of France. She overcame the disadvantage of growing up in an occupied country. Another interesting biography of Marie Curie. She was not an easy person to get along with, and her stubbornness seems to have played a role in her unwillingness to recognize the effects that radium was having on her body. As a person she is someone to admire, but neither are her failures shied from. Get A Copy. Obsessive genius: The inner world of Marie Curie. E-mail: klc1 columbia. I will definitely recommend this book to biography, science lovers. What a strong woman she was, trying to balance home, children and her work which was all consuming. Please note that the tricks or techniques listed in this pdf are either fictional or claimed to work by its creator. Without the obsession? Obsessive Genius: The Inner World of Marie Curie Reviews Barbara Kingsolver Paperback Books. Curie is still regarded by most as the pre-eminent woman scientist of the 20th century. Straight-forward chronicle of Maria Curie's life and family. And Irene's daughter also became a famous scientist! Though her father was a professor, the family was impoverished because the Russians only wanted Russian teachers in the schools in Poland. Scientifically, we gained so much from her. You may also like. Curie was the fifth child of impoverished intellectual parents in Poland. Place Published New York. Obsessive Genius is a dazzling portrait of Curie, her amazing scientific success, and the price she paid for fame. Hot Junie B. Obsessive Genius doesn't shy away from Marie Curie's recurrent clinical depressions, which began during her adolescence, nor from her obsessive, hard-driving personality. Their first Nobel Prize in was a mutual effort but her second came later in her life and was clearly something that she could not be denied. She has three children and six grandchildren. Author Goldsmith does a brilliant job of articulating Curie's scientific discoveries in a way the lay person can follow, but she constantly alluded to various inaccurate myths about the Curies that I had not been aware of, and thus found kind of distracting.
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