Description

Book Synopsis
Set in an era witness to some of the most avant-garde and scintillating scientific discoveries and artistic creations of the last century, this novel takes readers behind the scenes and into the lives of many of history’s most fascinating and revolutionary minds, all while posing the question—could a mathematical discovery be so controversial and threatening as to drive one to kill?

After the murder of his best friend lands Michael Igerinos in the center of the investigation as the prime suspect, he is transported back to the turn of the 20th Century, into the heart of Bohemian Paris and the sensual, hedonistic pursuits of the artists who haunted its infamous Moulin Rouge. There they are privy to the tormented genius of Toulouse-Lautrec, the twisted, visceral perspective of a young Picasso, and the wild exploits of les artistes de Montmartre.

Michael and Stefanos meet at the groundbreaking Second International Congress of Mathematics in 1900, at which the greatest mathematical minds of the 20th Century—Hilbert, Poincaré, Bertrand Russell, Gödel—probed the depths of mathematical mystery and challenged the very foundations on which all of mathematical theory is based.

Their mutual passion for uncovering the deepest, most elusive secrets of the universe unites them and their search for mathematical discovery draws them down a dark path whose tragic end neither man could possibly foresee.

Trade Review
Michaelides has provided us with a multi-layered tale. Our heroes find themselves in Paris at the time of major changes in politics and arts. They visit the Moulin Rouge (was Hilbert really there being entertained by dancing girls?) and meet up with the younger artists living in Montmartre, Picasso included. They talk mathematics among themselves and discuss geometry with artists. Igerinos, after his return to Athens, is caught up in the turbulent times of Venizelos’s attempt to reorganize Greek society and his conflict with the Royalists. There is also romance and dealing with underworld criminals to entertain the reader. The whole book is great fun and should appeal to any reader of the Bulletin"". - British Society for the History of Mathematics

Pythagorean Crimes

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    A Hardback by Tefcros Michaelides

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      View other formats and editions of Pythagorean Crimes by Tefcros Michaelides

      Publisher: Parmenides Publishing
      Publication Date: 31/10/2008
      ISBN13: 9781930972261, 978-1930972261
      ISBN10: 1930972261

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Set in an era witness to some of the most avant-garde and scintillating scientific discoveries and artistic creations of the last century, this novel takes readers behind the scenes and into the lives of many of history’s most fascinating and revolutionary minds, all while posing the question—could a mathematical discovery be so controversial and threatening as to drive one to kill?

      After the murder of his best friend lands Michael Igerinos in the center of the investigation as the prime suspect, he is transported back to the turn of the 20th Century, into the heart of Bohemian Paris and the sensual, hedonistic pursuits of the artists who haunted its infamous Moulin Rouge. There they are privy to the tormented genius of Toulouse-Lautrec, the twisted, visceral perspective of a young Picasso, and the wild exploits of les artistes de Montmartre.

      Michael and Stefanos meet at the groundbreaking Second International Congress of Mathematics in 1900, at which the greatest mathematical minds of the 20th Century—Hilbert, Poincaré, Bertrand Russell, Gödel—probed the depths of mathematical mystery and challenged the very foundations on which all of mathematical theory is based.

      Their mutual passion for uncovering the deepest, most elusive secrets of the universe unites them and their search for mathematical discovery draws them down a dark path whose tragic end neither man could possibly foresee.

      Trade Review
      Michaelides has provided us with a multi-layered tale. Our heroes find themselves in Paris at the time of major changes in politics and arts. They visit the Moulin Rouge (was Hilbert really there being entertained by dancing girls?) and meet up with the younger artists living in Montmartre, Picasso included. They talk mathematics among themselves and discuss geometry with artists. Igerinos, after his return to Athens, is caught up in the turbulent times of Venizelos’s attempt to reorganize Greek society and his conflict with the Royalists. There is also romance and dealing with underworld criminals to entertain the reader. The whole book is great fun and should appeal to any reader of the Bulletin"". - British Society for the History of Mathematics

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