Synopses & Reviews
The Mathematics of Love is a poignant chronicle of two people, separated by centuries, whose lives—amazingly, impossibly—become interwoven in a brilliant tapestry of tragedy, memory, and time. Following alternate but intimately connected stories—of a curious, promiscuous teenager in her season of exile and awakening in the English countryside in 1976, and a nineteenth-century soldier damaged on the fields of Waterloo, struggling to find his way back to life with the help of a compassionate, extraordinary woman—Emma Darwin's breathtaking narrative brilliantly evokes the horrors of war, the pain of loss, the heat of passion, and the enduring power of love.
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“Emma Darwins prose is golden and convincing. The book is an addictive, engaging foray into historical fiction.” Express
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“An ambitious beginning, as much a ghost story as a romance.” The Observer
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“A convincing and involving read. A book to lose yourself in this summer.” Daily Mail (London)
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“The two stories that Darwin tells here add up to something hauntingly beautiful.” Washington Post Book World
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“A novel rapturous with the joys of history...Annas story is told in a wonderfully convincing, brittle, adolescent voice.” The Australian
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“This is that rare thing, a book that works on every conceivable level...An uncommonly good read...A real achievement.” London Times
About the Author
Emma Darwin studied drama and theatre arts at Birmingham University and then worked in academic publishing before turning to photography and writing. A great-great-granddaughter of Charles Darwin and his wife, Emma Wedgwood, Emma now lives in London with her two children. The author of The Mathematics of Love, she is finishing a Ph.D. in creative writing at Goldsmiths College.