Showing posts with label copernicus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label copernicus. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Dava Sobel on WAMC This Morning

In association with her visit to the Writers Institute today, Dava Sobel will be on WAMC's The Roundtable this morning to speak about her new biography of Copernicus, the Polish astronomer who overturned humankind's understanding of the Universe, twenty years before Galileo's birth.

No exact time is available, but based on the schedule of guests, we anticipate she will be on around 11AM.

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Wednesday, November 9, 2011

The Power of Books!

"It doesn't happen often, but there are times when a single book turns the world on its head. Isaac Newton's Principia unraveled the mystery of gravity. Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species explained how evolution worked."


"But before either of these, there was On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres by Nicolaus Copernicus. It was published in 1543. In it, Copernicus made the astounding claim that Earth revolves around the sun, not the other way around."

Dava Sobel, who visits tomorrow, Nov. 10, was profiled yesterday on NPR. The author of A More Perfect Heaven, a new biography of Copernicus, Sobel speaks about the huge impact the astronomer's small book had on human civilization. More.

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A Heavenly Book, Tomorrow

Dava Sobel talks about her new biography of Copernicus, A More Perfect Heaven, tomorrow, November 10, at 4:15pm in the Assembly Hall, Campus Center on the University at Albany uptown campus, and at 8pm in the same location.

Dava Sobel, bestselling science writer, is the author most recently of A More Perfect Heaven: How Copernicus Revolutionized the Cosmos (2011), the story of the reclusive Polish Catholic priest (1473-1543) whose scientific observations changed mankind’s view of the Universe. Sobel explains Copernicus’s discovery that the earth revolves around the sun, and his courageous defiance of received wisdom, religious tradition and ordinary “common sense.” She also chronicles the events of the “Copernican Revolution,” how his manuscripts circulated secretly among the great scientific personalities of Renaissance Europe, and how his work finally came to be published for a wider audience as the author lay on his deathbed.

Writing in the Chicago Tribune, Julia Keller called it, “A heavenly book…. a great story filled with fascinating characters, excruciating near-misses and the sudden splendor of the new discovery,” and said, “[T]his beautiful book, combining science and a sort of poetic awe, is emblematic of her work as a whole.” The Library Journal reviewer said, “Sobel has the knowledge and writerly grace to explain what Copernicus accomplished,” and called it, “A book on science and personality that should intrigue us all.”

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Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Falling in Love with Copernicus

In an interview entitled "Why I Fell for Copernicus," Dava Sobel talks with Michael Bond of the New Scientist about the importance for a biographer of falling in love with her subject:

Q: You've [also] admitted to having a "long-term crush" on Galileo. Do you always fall for the scientists you write about? A: Yes, I think it's important to feel something like a love for the person, because it's a long time to sit alone in a room. It's not like journalism when you're moving from topic to topic. That sense of some kind of bond with the person makes it easier. More.

Dava Sobel visits this Thursday, Nov. 10th.

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Friday, November 4, 2011

Galileo's "Bastard" Daughter

Early scientists whose ideas "shatter the cosmos" are a specialty of science writer and biographer Dava Sobel, who comes to speak Thursday, Nov. 10, about her new book on Copernicus.

Sobel's earlier bestsellers include Galileo's Daughter (1999), about the relationship between Galileo and his illegitimate daughter Virginia who, because of her "bastard" status, was regarded as unmarriageable, and was placed in a convent at the age of 13 to live out her life in poverty and seclusion. Galileo carried on a rich correspondence with Virginia. 124 letters survive.

From the book:

"She alone of Galileo's three children mirrored his own brilliance, industry, and sensibility, and by virtue of these qualities became his confidante." More.

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Thursday, November 3, 2011

Dava Sobel vs. Dava Sobel

Dava Sobel battles herself about whether or not it is legitimate to write an original play about Copernicus (which she did) in order to fill a two-year gap in the known facts of his life, and embed it in her new biography of Copernicus (which she also did). The piece appears in the Huffington Post.

Sobel visits the Writers Institute Nov. 10th.

The dramatis personae are Dava Sobel Author (DSA) and Dava Sobel Playwright (DSP).

DSP: But one could imagine the dialogue.
DSA: Imagine?
DSP: Based on what's known of the facts, of course....
DSA: You mean make it up?
DSP: To recreate the yeastiness of the situation.
DSA: I wouldn't touch that. I've based my entire career as a journalist on not making up things.
DSP: As long as I'm candid about calling the work a play, who's to fault me? More.

The published play, “And the Sun Stood Still,” was presented as a staged reading by the Writers Institute in April 2008, and has continued to be developed over the course of the past few years in consultation with playwright, director, UAlbany professor and New York State Writers Institute Program Fellow W. Langdon Brown, among others.

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