Enchantress of Numbers
Books | Fiction / Historical / General
3.4
Jennifer Chiaverini
“Cherished Reader, Should you come upon Enchantress of Numbers by Jennifer Chiaverini...consider yourself quite fortunate indeed....Chiaverini makes a convincing case that Ada Byron King is a woman worth celebrating.”—USA TodayThe New York Times bestselling author of Mrs. Lincoln's Dressmaker and Switchboard Soldiers illuminates the life of Ada Byron King, Countess of Lovelace—Lord Byron's daughter and the world's first computer programmer. The only legitimate child of Lord Byron, the most brilliant, revered, and scandalous of the Romantic poets, Ada was destined for fame long before her birth. But her mathematician mother, estranged from Ada's infamous and destructively passionate father, is determined to save her only child from her perilous Byron heritage. Banishing fairy tales and make-believe from the nursery, Ada’s mother provides her daughter with a rigorous education grounded in mathematics and science. Any troubling spark of imagination—or worse yet, passion or poetry—is promptly extinguished. Or so her mother believes. When Ada is introduced into London society as a highly eligible young heiress, she at last discovers the intellectual and social circles she has craved all her life. Little does she realize how her exciting new friendship with Charles Babbage—the brilliant, charming, and occasionally curmudgeonly inventor of an extraordinary machine, the Difference Engine—will define her destiny.Enchantress of Numbers unveils the passions, dreams, and insatiable thirst for knowledge of a largely unheralded pioneer in computing—a young woman who stepped out of her father’s shadow to achieve her own laurels and champion the new technology that would shape the future.
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Author
Jennifer Chiaverini
Pages
448
Publisher
Penguin
Published Date
2018-11-27
ISBN
1101985216 9781101985212
Community ReviewsSee all
"Not a huge fan of this. I was hoping for more of a focus on the math and her impact on the Difference Engine invention. That’s there, but it’s buried in several hundred pages of imaginings about her personal life. There was an interesting thread about how it must have felt to grow up as a famous poet’s daughter but after awhile, I began to wonder, “Would this really have been that big a deal? Really?” It seemed to take forever to get to the point where the whole Difference Engine thing even shows up. Additionally, even though there were some passages about the impact the Difference Engine would’ve had, I was still left wondering. It could’ve helped to have even just a paragraph about why this might matter to someone who wasn’t a mathematician. Brief reference to the military and economics were never fully explained. It felt to me like the author was repeating what she had found written in her sources about the Difference Engine without really fully understanding it herself. I have sympathy for that, of course, but part of why I read historical fiction is to have a different way to interpret historical periods and their events. In this instance, I don’t feel like I have any greater knowledge than I started out with. Unfortunately, I haven’t even been intrigued enough to want to find a non-fiction book on the topic."