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Home > Catalogue > The Search for E. T. Bell

Details

  • Page extent: 382 pages
  • Size: 228 x 152 mm
  • Weight: 0.688 kg

Library of Congress

  • Dewey number: 510/.92 B
  • Dewey version: 20
  • LC Classification: QA29.B447 R45 1993
  • LC Subject headings:
    • Bell, Eric Temple,--1883-1960
    • Mathematicians--United States--Biography
    • Authors, American--20th century--Biography

Library of Congress Record

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Hardback

 (ISBN-13: 9780883855089 | ISBN-10: 0883855089)

DOI: 10.2277/0883855089

  • Published September 1996

In stock

 (Stock level updated: 01:50 GMT, 21 November 2009)

£47.00

Eric Temple Bell (1883–1960) was a distinguished mathematician and a best selling popularizer of mathematics. His Men of Mathematics, still in print after almost sixty years, inspired scores of young readers to become mathematicians. Under the name of John Taine, he also published science fiction novels (among them The Time Stream, Before the Dawn, and The Crystal Horde) that served to broaden the subject matter of that genre during its early years. In The Search for E. T. Bell, Constance Reid has given us a compelling account of this complicated, difficult man who never divulged to anyone, not even to his wife and son, the story of his early life and family background. Her book is thus more of a mystery than a traditional biography. It begins with the discovery of an unexpected inscription in an English churchyard and a series of cryptic notations in a boy’s schoolbook. Then comes an inadvertent revelation, by Bell himself, in a respected mathematical journal. You will have to read the book to learn the rest.

• Winner, 1995 Beckenbach book prize • Includes a collection of over 75 photographs

Contents

Acknowledgments; 1. The eloquence of facts; 2. A habit of independent work; 3. Imagination's other place; 4. The prime years; 5. The low road; Index.

Review

‘Constance Reid, the foremost mathematical biographer of our time, has written a remarkable book, her best and most compelling yet. A writer of skill and intelligence, she could make even dull subjects interesting; given Bell to sink her teeth into, she has produced a dazzling piece of work.’ College Mathematics Journal

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