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6 verk 385 medlemmar 32 recensioner

Om författaren

Shelley Emling has been a journalist for 20 years. She was previously a foreign correspondent for Cox Newspapers, and her work has appeared in The New York Times, Fortune, USA Today, and the International Herald Tribune. She's currently an editor for AOL and lives with her husband and three visa mer children in New York. visa färre

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The book is a well written and balanced biography that provides an interesting amount of context to give the reader a better understanding of how profound the protagonist's fossil discoveries were. Of course, the story is even more appealing because the protagonist is a woman from a lower socio economic background in the early 19th century.

However, as with other biographies of lesser known persons, it sometimes felt as if the author was simply adding peripheral material to complete the work- probably because there simply is not a tremendous amount to tell about this person's life.

It also doesn't help that the protagonist is not a particularly likable person.
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la2bkk | 9 andra recensioner | Aug 3, 2023 |
Really interesting look at the life of Marie Curie and her daughters. I had no idea her eldest daughter continued working on the same sort of stuff and won a Noble Prize as well. I know that Marie and I would have been good friends when I read that she despised the French school system for bogging children down too long in the classroom and not providing enough physical exercise and fresh air. 100 years later and that is still a problem, probably even worse.

 
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bangerlm | 16 andra recensioner | Jan 18, 2023 |
A history of Mary Anning, a little recognized female paleontologist who found the first large fossils in England, and set the course for development of the theory of evolution.
 
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lilibrarian | 9 andra recensioner | May 25, 2021 |
Count Folke Bernadotte is largely forgotten today, but his murder in Jerusalem in 1948 made headlines around the world. The first UN peace mediator in the Middle East, he was targeted by members of the Lehi (Freedom Fighters of Israel), better known as the Stern Gang. His crime, in their view, was that he was an enemy of Israel and was close to forcing the newly-formed Israeli government led by David Ben Gurion, into relinquishing control of Jerusalem and more. His murderers were never punished.

Shelley Emling has done a service by revisiting the life of Count Bernadotte, and focusing on his role in the final days of the Second World War when he organised and led a rescue mission to take female prisoners — overwhelmingly Scandinavians — out of Nazi concentration camps and to safety in Sweden.

Emling is extremely sympathetic to Bernadotte and that comes through on every page of the book. But she’s also aware of the controversies that surround him, including allegations that he got rather too chummy with some of the Nazi leaders and that he did little to free Jewish prisoners (she contests this point). Emling quotes at length Bernadotte’s words in which he describes first meeting SS boss Heinrich Himmler — and this does little to warm us to the man, who was at the very least naive.

His murder was obviously a crime, and the culprits should have been punished — not least because the attack is a stain on Israel’s reputation that has never been erased. But the story of Bernadotte’s life and his death is a more complex one than this short book can cover.
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ericlee | 3 andra recensioner | Jan 2, 2020 |

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Statistik

Verk
6
Medlemmar
385
Popularitet
#62,810
Betyg
½ 3.7
Recensioner
32
ISBN
18
Språk
1

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