Bienvenue à la Bibliothèque Alo de l'Université Shalom de Bunia
Retourner au premier écran avec les dernières notices... | Votre compte |
Titre : | A More Perfect Heaven |
Auteurs : | Dava Sobel |
Type de document : | document électronique |
Editeur : | [S.l.] : Walker & Company, 2011 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-8027-1793-1 |
Index. décimale : | 520 (Astronomie et sciences connexes) |
Résumé : |
"Review""Ms. Sobel is an elegant stylist, a riveting and efficient storyteller, a writer who can bring the dustiest of subjects to full-blooded life ÔÇö poignant, in the case of Galileo; cautious but also loving, loyal and feisty in the case of Copernicus."" ÔÇöKatherine Bouton, New York Times ""Lively, inventiveÔǪa masterly specimen of close-range cultural history. Ms. Sobel certainly brings Copernicus to life, perhaps better than any other author. Ms. Sobel presents a thoroughly researched and eminently readable account of a major scientist who celebrated the sun yet lurks in the shadows."" ÔÇô The Wall Street Journal ""Dava Sobel describes [CopernicusÔÇÖs] life and his legacy in her enjoyable ""A More Perfect Heaven""ÔǪ[A] delightful immersion into tumultuous timesÔǪAll this history is just the background for the heart of SobelÔÇÖs book: the meeting of the aged Copernicus with the young German mathematician Georg Joachim Rheticus, who had heard of CopernicusÔÇÖs ideas and traveled to Poland for a first-hand account. Rheticus stayed, helped Copernicus finish his treatise and, four years later, shepherded it through its first printingÔǪWeÔÇÖll never know precisely how Rheticus convinced Copernicus to finally set it all in print, but, as Sobel shows, we certainly owe him gratitude, for these manuscripts are treasures of our world, tracing our first steps out into an understandable cosmos."" --Mike Brown, *Washington Post * ""The new work by science writer Dava Sobel, author of ""Longitude"" (1995) and ""Galileo's Daughter"" (2000) is half-narrative, half-drama ÔÇö and it's all enthralling, all illuminating. As in her previous bestselling books, SobelÔǪ turns the history of science into a great story filled with fascinating characters, excruciating near-misses and the sudden splendor of the new discoveryÔǪA More Perfect Heaven is the story of how a young German mathematician named Rhetiucs finally persuaded Copernicus to publish his outlandish theory. Their relationship is the energizing spark of Sobel's bookÔǪHer two-act play ""And the Sun Stood Still"" is included in A More Perfect Heaven, and it puts flesh on the long-dissolved bones of these historical figuresÔǪSobel, who was writer-in-residence at the U. of C. in 2006, writes with a calm authority and a deep knowledge that never tip into condescension to the lay reader. The haunting final paragraph of this beautiful book, combining science and a sort of poetic awe, is emblematic of her work as a whole."" --Julia Keller, *Chicago Tribune* ""Like Rumpelstiltskin, Dava Sobel seems able to spin gold out of straw. She has made best-sellers out of two unlikely subjects: the history of longitude and the life of GalileoÔÇÖs daughterÔǪSobel goes beyond conjecture, which a historian may not, and instead takes conjecture in hand as a playwright can. The center of her book is a fictional two-act play ÔÇö ""And the Sun Stood Still""ÔǪItÔÇÖs absorbing and very well-written, and dramatically very effective. And very effective historically, tooÔǪThe gripe most of us history lovers have with historical fiction is that it imagines too much, reaches too far. SobelÔÇÖs dramatization gives immediacy to an historical account made up, as much of history is, by peripheral documents ÔÇö rent transactions, correspondence about local coin values, written in the formalistic and impersonal style of the dayÔǪSobel will have another of her improbable best-sellers, I predict, in this story of how Copernicus went to press ÔÇö a further example of how an authorÔÇÖs wit, intelligence, good grace and imagination can find gold in the most unlikely places."" --David Walton, *Kansas City Star┬á*┬á ""The wonderful detail and eloquent writing that Sobel demonstrated in her best-selling Longitude and Galileo's Daughter carry the reader along here too. Given what she has chosen to include, the book is first rateÔǪA More Perfect Heaven is a charming and accurate bookÔǪ[T]his carefully constructed biography leaves space for those of us probing the origins of heliocentrism to defend our speculations."" ÔÇöOwen Gingerich, *Nature * ""Sobel characteristically gives us the man in fullÔǪ[she] tells her story fluently."" ÔÇô Financial Times ""However readers respond to SobelÔÇÖs unorthodox addition, her account of CopernicusÔÇÖ life nicely balances personal details and such historical forces that knocked Copernicus around as the Reformation and the Teutonic Knights. SobelÔÇÖs latest assiduously researched, humanistic biography may prove irresistible to history-of-science fans.""ÔÇöBooklist┬á┬á ""Delivered with her usual stylistic grace (and here, a touch of astrological whimsy), Sobel's gamble largely succeeds in bringing Copernicus and his intellectually and religiously tumultuous time alive.""ÔÇöPublishers Weekly ""A book on science and personality that should intrigue us all.""ÔÇöLibrary Journal ""A liquid entertainment of choice passages on the thoughts and deeds of Copernicus.""ÔÇöKirkus Reviews ""A refreshingly fast-paced account of the life of Nicolaus Copernicus. ÔÇÿA More Perfect HeavenÔÇÖ does a good job of giving the flavor of life in Reformation-era EuropeÔǪan excellent book."" ÔÇô The Economist ""As a colorful, singular history, SobelÔÇÖs narrative doesnÔÇÖt disappoint. But her most surprising and satisfying turn is the two act play, ÔÇÿAnd the Sun Stood StillÔÇÖ"" ÔÇô MenÔÇÖs Journal About the AuthorDava Sobel is the acclaimed author of the internationally bestselling titles Longitude, Galileo's Daughter, The Illustrated Longitude, and The Planets. She lives in East Hampton, New York. " |