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      • Plot Summary German-Austrian author Daniel Kehlmann’s historical novel, Measuring the World (2005), offers a fictionalized account of the lives of the German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss and the German geographer Alexander von Humboldt, two figures who in the 19th century developed groundbreaking methods for measuring the Earth.
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  2. Plot Summary. German-Austrian author Daniel Kehlmann’s historical novel, Measuring the World (2005), offers a fictionalized account of the lives of the German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss and the German geographer Alexander von Humboldt, two figures who in the 19th century developed groundbreaking methods for measuring the Earth.

  3. The novel re-imagines the lives of German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss and German geographer Alexander von Humboldt—who was accompanied on his journeys by French explorer Aimé Bonpland—and their many groundbreaking ways of taking the world's measure, as well as Humboldt's and Bonpland's travels in America and their meeting in 1828 ...

    • Daniel Kehlmann
    • 2005
  4. Jan 1, 2005 · Toward the end of the eighteenth century, two young Germans set out to measure the world. One of them, the Prussian aristocrat Alexander von Humboldt, negotiates savanna and jungle, travels down the Orinoco, tastes poisons, climbs the highest mountain known to man, counts head lice, and explores every hole in the ground.

    • (19K)
    • Hardcover
  5. Book Summary. Measuring the World marks the debut of a glorious new talent on the international scene. Young Austrian writer Daniel Kehlmann’s brilliant comic novel revolves around the meeting of two colossal geniuses of the Enlightenment. Late in the eighteenth century, two young Germans set out to measure the world.

  6. Nov 5, 2006 · Nov. 5, 2006. What a wonderful country Germany must be. “Measuring the World,” which resembles nothing more American than a pint-size novel by Thomas Pynchon, displaced J. K. Rowling and Dan...

  7. Measuring the World is a novel of two great German minds, the mathematician Carl Gauß and the explorer Alexander von Humboldt. In alternating chapters (with some overlap) Kehlmann tells their life stories, two very different approaches to surveying the world of that time, the one, Gauß, seeing little of the physical world but much in his mind ...

  8. With its lively translation, Daniel Kehlmann’s Measuring the World tells the parallel stories of two scientists who were child prodigies, Alexander von Humboldt and Carl Friedrich Gauss. In the early 19th century, the business of measuring, naming and categorizing the known world was in full swing.

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