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Marie Curie and Her Daughters: The Private Lives of Science's First Family 1st Edition, 1st Printing Edition

4.2 out of 5 stars 55 customer reviews
ISBN-13: 978-0230115712
ISBN-10: 0230115713
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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press; 1st Edition, 1st Printing edition (August 21, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0230115713
  • ISBN-13: 978-0230115712
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1 x 9.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (55 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #914,305 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
Like many readers interested in women and science, I knew little about pioneering scientist Marie Curie's life after the death of her husband, Pierre, and her first Nobel Prize.

This book fills a gap in public knowledge covering nearly three decades in Marie Curie's life after Pierre's death, including her subsequent tragic affair with a married fellow scientist that nearly cost her the career she had struggled to build, her second Nobel prize and her difficulties balancing her work and parenting two equally brilliant daughters, Irene and Eve.

The book also goes into detail about the interesting subsequent lives of Irene Curie-Joliot, a famous scientist in her own right and Eve, who became a well-known journalist. The book was written with the cooperation of Irene's daughter, who is also a scientist and gave the author access to Curie family correspondence that apparently was not previously available to the public.

The book is kind towards its subjects, but is truthful about their personal flaws as well as their strengths. Marie's near-nervous breakdown over her love affair and Irene's blindness about the dictatorial Communist regimes she admired astonished me and expanded my knowledge of the two women, whom I had previously viewed as passionless professionals.

Marie's and Irene's struggles to keep working, despite serious illnesses resulting from overexposure to radioactive substances they researched, was inspiring.

The author writes about science in a clear manner, and discussions of the Curies' work are balanced with fascinating details of their personal lives. This is definitely a book to give the married career woman in your life or a young female relative who is thinking of going into the sciences as a career.
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Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
Marie Curie won the Nobel Prize for both chemistry and physics. That is all I knew before I read this book. I am not a good science student. Shelley Emling succeeds in making scientific discovery interesting to read. I learned about the benefits and dangers of radium. Radium and simple Xray technology have used to treat cancer for almost a hundred years. Marie Curie's passion for the development of radium and the treatment of cancer is a strong theme in this book. Radium is also highly radioactive. Long term exposure to radium can cause health problems like hearing loss, low blood pressure and vision problems. I did not know how much effort went into mining for radium. I learned that one ounce of radium cost $50,000 in 1921. Radium could also be found in products like cigarettes and chocolate. There are numerous schools and treatment centers in France, Poland and New York that bear Marie Curie's name. I also learned that Marie Curie enjoyed reading poetry. Emiling cites a poem entitled "To The Young" by Adam Asnyk. This is a very inspirational poem about the hunger and quest to keep learning. I like this poem very much.

I did not know that Marie had two daughters.They were successful in their respective careers as well. This is because of Marie's support and encouragement. Irene, her eldest daughter, developed an injection that is now used to treat leukeimia. Irene also discovered artificial radioactivity. Her work has helped doctors locate the flow of blood and nutrients into different organs in the body. Marie also had another daughter named Eve. She wrote a biography of her mother that became an Academy nominated film in 1943. Eve is also credited as being the first lady of United Nations Children's Fund or UNICEF.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
Well written book, but nothing what could be not found in other biographies. Regarding Curie family, there is other book that presents the history of Curie "clan" that I prefer. This is The Curies: A Biography of the Most Controversial Family in Science. Much more details about Eve and Irene and Joliot-Curie, especially his political meanders.

This doesn't mean that I don't recomend this book. Well written, with some photographs that I have never seen. I will keep it in my "Curie" library
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Format: Hardcover Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
As a child I read Eve Currie's biography of her mother, "Madam Curie". (Actually, I read my mother's Reader's Digest Condensed Books version.) With my interest in science I was captivated by the woman who discovered radium and polonium, saved lives on the battlefields of WWI, and won two Nobel Prizes.

This book has a different focus, and a less reverential tone. Marie's early work with Pierre is only passingly referred to. The book opens in 1911, and really gets going with Marie, and teenaged daughter Irene, caught up in battlefield medicine during the First World War. After the war France was impoverished, and Marie struggled to find radium for her institute. At this point Missy Meloney, American journalist and organizer, enters the Curie world. In 1921 she brings Madam Curie and daughters Irene and Eve to America for a tour. Marie not only gets her radium, but finds she is a star in America. In France she couldn't even gain admission to the Academy of Sciences, two Noble Prizes not being enough to compensate for her being a woman. (Many years later Irene, with a Nobel of her own, was likewise rejected. Author Emling notes that at least they were consistent.)

Emling follows the three Curies forward through the rest of Marie's life and through the lives of Irene and Eve. Meloney remains a key player, often helping one Curie or another.

Marie remains an indefatigable and dedicated scientist to the endt. She defends her radium and her institute; after her death, the Radium Institute was fittingly renamed the Curie Institute.

Irene inherited her mother's scientific aptitude and drive. With husband Frederic she was the first to induce radioactivity in non-radioactive materials. They also nearly became the first to observe nuclear fission.
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