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The Other Einstein
- Narrated by: Mozhan Marnò
- Length: 8 hrs and 30 mins
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Summary
In the tradition of The Paris Wife and Mrs. Poe, The Other Einstein offers us a window into a brilliant, fascinating woman whose light was lost in Einstein's enormous shadow. This is the story of Einstein's wife, a brilliant physicist in her own right, whose contribution to the special theory of relativity is hotly debated and may have been inspired by her own profound and very personal insight.
Mitza Maric has always been a little different from other girls. Most 20-year-olds are wives by now, not studying physics at an elite Zurich university with only male students trying to outdo her clever calculations. But Mitza is smart enough to know that, for her, math is an easier path than marriage. And then fellow student Albert Einstein takes an interest in her, and the world turns sideways. Theirs becomes a partnership of the mind and of the heart, but there might not be room for more than one genius in a marriage.
What listeners say about The Other Einstein
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- Cristina
- 23-09-24
Loved it
Really worth listening to!!! Well written and entertaining!!very easy to follow! Adds a good perspective on the life and work of Einstein. I keen about his first wife and it’s great how she’s brought to life!
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- Lynn
- 10-05-20
Brilliant
Really enjoyed this book from the perspective of Einstein’s wife. Although in part fiction very credible. Narrated beautifully.
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- Ciara Sands
- 27-06-21
As a female engineer this was inspiring.
I’m just sorry Mileva didn’t realise her potential. How history would have been re-written.
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- Daniela Crouch
- 23-06-24
brilliant book but hard to stomach
it's a brilliant book, but I've found it hard to stomach in places and it made me angry at what intelligent women have had to endure through the centuries. at the same time, I was very conscious that this is fiction with some very private situations so it's hard to tell if he was really the selfish abuser she paints. still, I don't think he deserves to be the icon he is without her name added to his theory.
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- DNK
- 20-05-23
Excellent book
This was a fascinating look at the life of a woman about whom I had previously known nothing. Well written and interesting throughout.
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- M A H
- 12-09-24
Enjoyable but I felt misleading
What I thought was an accurate description of a true life past experience was filled with poetic license giving me what I thought was a very poor picture of Einstein. This is based on letters and historical documentation but also assumptions and guesses. The assumptions and guesses seem to be the biggest negative parts of the book. I throughly enjoyed listening but at the end the author explains how the information was obtained or not as the case may be and this very much spoiled the whole experience.
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- osteo1
- 31-10-18
Outstanding story highlighting how women struggle for equality
This is no feminist rant for those who believe it is. It hasn't been written without reason,cause or need. It is an excellent story with a great deal of truth backed up with evidence from material gathered by the author. It shows just how long and to some extent how far women have had to come in order to be accepted in a domain perpetuated with men who can and who are often mysoginistic towards women. Sadly the story exposes how, all too often women are type cast and pigeon holed into stereotypical roles without regard or recognition for their talents and or intellect. My only thoughts after this story, is why justice hasn’t been given to balancing out that actually Albert Einstein’s wife was the brains behind the theory or relativity and it is she who should posthumously be getting a Nobel prize.
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2 people found this helpful
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- emma
- 06-06-17
Fascinating and frustrating
An excellent dramatised account of the life of promising scientist Mitza Maric. The narration is beautiful, and the tale both fascinating and frustrating, as the talented Mitza encounters the prejudice of a male-dominated society, attempting to create a life for herself as a physicist in the shadow of her revered husband.
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- Fofito
- 05-02-22
A different perspective on Albert Einstein
This is a very brilliant novel. It shows a different perspective on Albert Einstein's life. Even though it is a novel, one cannot help but wonder whether there is a bottom of thruth...
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- K. J. Kelly
- 13-03-18
Speculative but powerful look at a woman pioneer
What did you like most about The Other Einstein?
A story I never knew I should know.
What was one of the most memorable moments of The Other Einstein?
The meeting and wooing of the two, their meeting of minds at first, but there were many moments that showed me the disadvantage throughout history of being born a woman.
Which character – as performed by Mozhan Marno – was your favourite?
Mitza herself. It's her story and her voice that shines.
Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
Oh yes... without giving too much away it concerned the fate of the protagonist's child. Weeping buckets in the streets, never a good look.
Any additional comments?
Speculative biographical narrative of the woman behind one of modern history's most influential scientists.
4.5 stars. The exact facts may, most likely, never be known, but this really gets you thinking: "who WAS the instigator? Who was the brains? Was it all really who history has led us to believe?
I saw the TV programme with Geoffrey Rush a short while ago and had this book in mind since then. With International Women's Day just past, I decided it was a good time to read about the wife and colleague of Einstein, but whose name I didn't even know.
Mileva “Mitza” Marić. A true story. A Serbian woman, with a limp, fighting to show she deserves her hard-won place at a Polytechnic in Zurich. Treated with disdain by almost everybody, one other student at first shows kindness and later respect for her mind, her ambition and her great talent for mathematics and physics. He is Albert Einstein.
This story charts the rise of Einstein through the eyes of the woman who loved him, and exactly what life there would be for someone in his shadow. Mitza speaks to us directly, and though the author has had to take liberties, surmise, take educated guesses, it feels as though it all COULD be true, things fit the known facts. Mitza shows us just how hard any woman back then would have had to work to show herself even the equal of a man, and how the natural trials of females (pregnancy, childbirth, motherhood, domestic drudgery) severely limited and curtailed their potential. Maddening really.
I loved the scenes with Marie Curie, with two female scientists talking about men. I bawled (while listening on the streets!) to some very upsetting scenes of Mitza's first child and her fate. My feelings about Albert steadily changed through Mizta's story and I'm not sure I will ever think of him in quite the same way again, however many liberties have been taken with the truth.
I sped through this in less than two days, the narrator's voice on audiobook a personal and involving one. Little-known stories in history are those that make it, that the big events are built on. That deserve to be read and known and remembered.
This definitely deserves a wider readership. An early pioneer of important science and a victim of Victorian thinking, Milena both defined and was defined by history.
A sample copy of this audiobook was provided by Nudgebooks for an honest review.
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