![]() As a warning to readers, the countess has explicit memories of both positive and negative sexual experiences with her late husband. It deals with the way women can judge a woman negatively for not being feminine enough. It not only deals with sexism but also with the disregard a family can have even for a male scientist, and the opposition to science by those who feel science threatens religion. The hero is perhaps too good to be true, but this is a romance novel. The minor characters are also excellent, including the heroine's mother and sister, and the hero's brother and mentor. I find the countess to be an incredibly realistic character and quite the mathematical type. The story explores the consequences of his decision and what the countess decides to do. The mathematics is a fundamental part of the plot and is done correctly. He has decided to apply these methods to trade with a realistic application to trade futures. He wants to move on in his own direction using the statistical methods he has learned from her. ![]() He offers to find her a new cover or help her come out as the true author of all these works. ![]() The story begins when the hero decides he needs to end the lies for family reasons. This is a romance novel set in Victorian England in which the heroine is a biologist studying inheritance and the hero is her friend who publishes and presents her work in his name. (click on names to see more mathematical fiction ![]() A list compiled by Alex Kasman ( College of Charleston) ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |