Half Life by Jillian Cantor

Releases March 23rd
Get it on Amazon

Ah, the real and fictional romantic story of Marie Curie's life. I have heard of her, but never really knew much about her. Other than she is the first woman to receive two Nobel Prize awards in her field. Marie Curie is also remembered for her discovery of radium and polonium, and her huge contribution to finding treatments for cancer. It's an honor to know a woman was celebrated in the early 1900's. It was very much a male-dominated field and time.

Half Life by Jillian Cantor is a "what if"  or a "what could have been' scenario. For fans of science and the people who work in it, that like a bit of fun fiction thrown in to add levity, I have no doubt you'll enjoy this read.

~Tanja

From the Cover...

In Poland in 1891, Marie Curie (then Marya Sklodowska) was engaged to a budding mathematician, Kazimierz Zorawski. But when his mother insisted she was too poor and not good enough, he broke off the engagement. A heartbroken Marya left Poland for Paris, where she would attend the Sorbonne to study chemistry and physics. Eventually Marie Curie would go on to change the course of science forever and be the first woman to win a Nobel Prize.
But what if she had made a different choice?

What if she had stayed in Poland, married Kazimierz at the age of twenty-four, and never attended the Sorbonne or discovered radium? What if she had chosen a life of domesticity with a constant hunger for knowledge in Russian Poland where education for women was restricted, instead of studying science in Paris and meeting Pierre Curie?

Entwining Marie Curie’s real story with Marya Zorawska’s fictional one, Half Life explores loves lost and destinies unfulfilled—and probes issues of loyalty and identity, gender and class, motherhood and sisterhood, fame and anonymity, scholarship and knowledge. Through parallel contrasting versions of Marya’s life, Jillian Cantor’s unique historical novel asks what would have happened if a great scientific mind was denied opportunity and access to education. It examines how the lives of one remarkable woman and the people she loved – as well as the world at large and course of science and history—might have been irrevocably changed in ways both great and small.


Thank you to 
Harper Perennial Publishing / Harper Collins
For sharing this title with me.

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