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Measuring the World

On sale

4th October 2010

Price: £8.99

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Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9781849164597

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Measuring the World recreates the parallel but contrasting lives of two geniuses of the German Enlightenment – the naturalist and explorer Alexander von Humboldt and the mathematician and physicist Carl Friedrich Gauss. Towards the end of the 18th century, these two brilliant young Germans set out to measure the world.

Humboldt
, a Prussian aristocrat schooled for greatness, negotiates savannah and jungle, climbs the highest mountain then known to man, counts head lice on the heads of the natives, and explores every hole in the ground.

Gauss, a man born in poverty who will be recognised as the greatest mathematician since Newton, does not even need to leave his home in Göttingen to know that space is curved. He can run prime numbers in his head, cannot imagine a life without women and yet jumps out of bed on his wedding night to jot down a mathematical formula.

Measuring the World is a novel of rare charm and readability, distinguished by its sly humour and unforgettable characterization. It brings the two eccentric geniuses to life, their longings and their weaknesses, their balancing act between loneliness and love, absurdity and greatness, failure and success.

Reviews

Good Book Guide
'Filled with wry humour, this is a warm, witty and ultimately tragic celebration of the many faces of genius' The Good Book Guide
Guardian
'Measuring the World has proved nothing less than a literary sensation ... the most successful German novel since Patrick Suskind's Perfume ... Daniel Kehlmann is a literary wunderkind already being compared to Nabokov and Proust' Guardian
Sunday Telegraph
An entertaining jeu d'esprit with a sharp intellectual and satirical edge' Sunday Telegraph