The Mathematician's Shiva
โ Scribed by Rojstaczer, Stuart
- Book ID
- 109239000
- Publisher
- Penguin Group, USA
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 568 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780698152205
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
WINNER OF THE 2014 NATIONAL JEWISH BOOK AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING DEBUT FICTION For readers of This Is Where I Leave You and Everything Is Illuminated, "a brilliant and compelling family saga full of warmth, pathos, history and humor" (Jonathan Evison, author of West of Here) When the greatest female mathematician in history passes away, her son, Alexander "Sasha" Karnokovitch, just wants to mourn his mother in peace. But rumor has it the notoriously eccentric Polish รฉmigrรฉ has solved one of the most difficult problems in all of mathematics, and has spitefully taken the solution to her grave. As a ragtag group of mathematicians from around the world descends upon Rachela's shiva, determined to find the proof or solve it for themselves--even if it means prying up the floorboards for notes or desperately scrutinizing the mutterings of her African Grey parrot--Sasha must come to terms with his mother's outsized influence on his life. Spanning decades and continents, from a crowded living room in Madison, Wisconsin, to the windswept beach on the Barents Sea where a young Rachela had her first mathematical breakthrough, The Mathematician's Shiva is an unexpectedly moving and uproariously funny novel that captures humanity's drive not just to survive, but to achieve the impossible.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
**For readers of This Is Where I Leave You and Everything Is Illuminated, โa brilliant and compelling family saga full of warmth, pathos, history and humorโ (Jonathan Evison, author of West of Here)** When the greatest female mathematician in history passes away, her son, Alexander โSashaโ Karnokov
**A comic, bittersweet tale of family evocative of *The Yiddish Policemen's Union* and *Everything Is Illuminated*** Alexander "Sasha" Karnokovitch and his family would like to mourn the passing of his mother, Rachela, with modesty and dignity. But Rachela, a famous Polish รฉmigrรฉ mathematicia