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Raised by her father in near isolation in the English countryside, Emilie Selden is trained as a brilliant natural philosopher and alchemist. In the spring of 1725, during the English Age of Reason, father and daughter embark upon their most daring alchemical experiment to date—attempting to breathe life into dead matter. But when Emilie—against her father’s wishes—experiences the passion of first love, she decides to listen to her heart over her head. Banished to London and plunged headlong into a society that is both glamorous and ruthless, Emilie discovers that for all her extraordinary education she has no insight into the workings of the human heart. When she tries to return to the world of books and study, she instead unravels a shocking secret that sets her on her true journey to enlightenment.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
February 14, 2006 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781415944349
- File size: 338996 KB
- Duration: 11:46:14
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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AudioFile Magazine
In eighteenth-century England at the time of the Enlightenment, Emilie, who studies both science and alchemy with her father, breaks out of the sheltered life he has constructed for her when she meets a flashy young merchant whose sweet talk she can't resist. Justine Eyre weaves a touch of innocence and vulnerability into her presentation of this na•ve young woman. Her imperious tone suits the main character, her father's only child. Eyre uses tone to good effect in characterizing the intellectual issues of the period and in drawing out the class differences that contribute to the subtext of the plot. John Lee's participation is limited but fits naturally into the production. J.E.M. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine -
Publisher's Weekly
December 19, 2005
A child of the English Age of Reason learns lessons of the heart in McMahon's fifth historical, her first published in the U.S. Like Philippa Gregory, she mixes historical accuracy with a heroine modern at heart if not in outward appearance. It's 1727, and 19-year-old Emilie Selden, cloistered since birth at Buckinghamshire's Selden Manor, is docile under the iron rule of her domineering father, John, a scientist by reputation and an alchemist by calling. Under his stern tutelage, Emilie, who narrates, studies nature using the same methods used by their hero, Sir Isaac Newton. While on the verge of formulating her own theory of air and fire, Emilie meets two men: Thomas Shales, a clergyman and natural philosopher who alienates John Selden as much through his regard for Emilie as through his disregard for alchemy, and Robert Aislabie, a London adventurer who calls at Selden Manor to gain the father's secrets and ends up taking the daughter's heart. Father and daughter soon learn that love and loss cannot be kept in the confines of the laboratory. McMahon highlights social turmoil through Emilie's maid, Sarah, and intellectual conflict at the Royal Society, including a memorable evocation of Newton's funeral. Emilie's voice is clear, and McMahon doesn't shy away from the Enlightenment's darker sides, giving this popular historical a satisfying gravity.
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