Une pure merveille !
Un roman d'une grande beauté, drôle, fin, extrêmement lumineux sur des sujets difficiles : la perte de
l'être aimé, la dureté de la vie et la tristesse qu'on barricade parfois... Elise franco-japonaise,
orpheline de sa maman veut poser LA question à son père et elle en trouvera le courage au fil des pages,
grâce au retour de sa grand-mère du japon, de sa rencontre avec son extravagante amie Stella..
Ensemble il ne diront plus Sayonara mais Mata Ne !
Marie Curie remains the only woman to have won two Nobel prizes -the first in 1903 for the discovery of radioactivity and the second in 1911 for the discovery...
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Marie Curie remains the only woman to have won two Nobel prizes -the first in 1903 for the discovery of radioactivity and the second in 1911 for the discovery of radium and polonium. What is even more remarkable is that the Nobel Prize wasn't awarded to another woman until twenty years later, and it was Marie's daughter, Hélène Langevin-Joliot, helped create the first atomic pile in France. Barbara Goldsmith uses original research to reveal the woman behind the icon. The result is not only a timely reappraisal of a scientific dynasty but also a dazzling portrait of Curie and the price she paid for her fame.