Lessons in Chemistry

A Novel

Pas de couverture

Bonnie Garmus: Lessons in Chemistry (2022, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)

Langue : English

Publié 10 juillet 2022 par Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

ISBN :
978-0-385-54737-6
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a publié une critique de Lessons in Chemistry par Bonnie Garmus

Please don't read this.

Bonnie Garmus, we get it, your protagonist is not like other girls. Now can we please cancel this belief that you have to be different from ALL other women around you in order to be a rEaL feminist? I read another review that said that it feels like the protagonist is a woman from 2022 who time-travelled to the 1950s and I fully agree. There is nothing 1950/60s about this book. But even if you're willing to overlook that, the portrayal of feminism and a 'strong, independent woman' in the book is so misplaced and annoying. Elizabeth Zott is qUirKy and dIfFereNt because she refers to salt as sodium chloride and vinegar as acetic acid. She's not basic like other women because she doesn't want to get married or have kids. She's brilliant and not only manages to learn a sport by studying physics, she also BUILDS a chemistry lab …

"Fun Summer Read" meets dramatic and poignant feminist tale

This book was fun and also inspirational. I didn't really have many expectations when I started it, but I liked the characters. Don't really have too much to say about it other than it had some great things to say about gender equality and also a really awesome canine character.

Also, readers should be aware that there is at least one and a half scenes in this book that depict sexual violence.

a publié une critique de Lessons in Chemistry par Bonnie Garmus

Sheldon Cooper meets Mrs. Maisel

I bought this book because I thought it were a realistic depiction of a female scientiest in the later 1950s/early 1960s. It most definitely is NOT anything like that, but it might still be worth a read.

The book follows the life of (fictitious) chemist Elisabeth Zott during the 1950s until 1961. She is pictured as a brillant, but very quirky scientist who is trying to succeed as a woman in academia as well as in personal life. Occasionally, there are time jumps into her past and changes in perspective (most of the time, her boyfriend or her dog), but most of the time the story focuses on Elisabeth. The book is not directly told through her perspective, though, so the reader does not only follow her stream of thoughts, but also people's reaction towards her behavior. Eliabeth's story is probably a story many women in STEM can relate …

Sujets

  • Fiction, historical, general
  • Fiction, feminist
  • Single women, fiction
  • Women scientists, fiction
  • Fiction, women