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Charles Darwin : Voyaging : Volume 1 of a Biography by Janet Browne
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Charles Darwin: Voyaging

by E. Janet Browne (otherwise under Janet Browne)

Series: Charles Darwin (Volume 1)

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163335,738 (4.67)5
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Princeton University Press (1996), Paperback, 622 pages

Member:vellino
Collections:Your libraryRating:*****
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Absorbing. ( )
  seabear | Jul 23, 2009 |
I personally like science writing that isn't overly stylistic. It tends to distract me from the content of the book (I think Gould fits in the overly stylistic category). This book was written in a straight-forward manner, and provides a fascinating account of Darwin's life up to the point where he's about to write the Origin of Species. ( )
  jduckart | Jun 16, 2007 |
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Epigraph
"Never mind about his genius, Mr. Pesca. We don't want genius in this country, unless it is accompanied by respectability." Wilkie Collins, 'The woman in white'.
Dedication
First words
'Some people call him an evil genius. Others said he was just a genius. Still, they unanimously saluted his brainpower.'
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Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0691026068, Paperback)

Few lives of great men offer so much interest--and so many mysteries--as the life of Charles Darwin, the greatest figure of nineteenth-century science, whose ideas are still inspiring discoveries and controversies more than a hundred years after his death. Yet only now, with the publication of Voyaging, the first of two volumes that will constitute the definitive biography, do we have a truly vivid and comprehensive picture of Darwin as man and as scientist. Drawing upon much new material, supported by an unmatched acquaintance with both the intellectual setting and the voluminous sources, Janet Browne has at last been able to unravel the central enigma of Darwin's career: how did this amiable young gentleman, born into a prosperous provincial English family, grow into a thinker capable of challenging the most basic principles of religion and science? The dramatic story of Voyaging takes us from agonizing personal challenges to the exhilaration of discovery; we see a young, inquisitive Darwin gradually mature, shaping, refining, and finally setting forth the ideas that would at last fall upon the world like a thunderclap in The Origin of Species.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)

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