Showing posts with label Marie Curie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marie Curie. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

The Elements of Marie Curie by Dava Sobel

 

In The Elements of Marie Curie, Dava Sobel presents the life of one of the most compelling figures in the history of science. Marie Curie combined relentless curiosity, monumental discovery, and personal sacrifice in a life marked by deep sadness. This book is a brilliant portrait of a scientist whose work fundamentally reshaped our understanding of the physical world whose story still inspires more than a century later.

At first glance, Marie Curie’s life might seem like well-trodden territory. She is one of the most famous scientists of all time — the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the only person to win two Nobels in two different sciences (physics and chemistry), and a pioneer whose research on radioactivity altered the course of modern physics and medicine. 

Sobel’s approach is not that of a biographer merely listing accomplishments. Instead, she focuses on the elements — literal and metaphorical — that defined Curie’s life and character: her scientific discoveries, her intellectual resilience, her personal losses, and the historical forces that shaped her path.

Sobel’s narrative opens with Curie’s early life as Maria Skłodowska in Russian-occupied Warsaw, a childhood marked by both hardship and defiance. Her determination to pursue education — in an era and a country where women were excluded from universities — set the tone for the rest of her life. Sobel excels at highlighting the decisions that propelled Curie forward: her clandestine schooling in Poland’s “Flying University,” her move to Paris to attend the Sorbonne, and the single-minded focus that carried her through poverty and isolation to academic success.

The heart of the book, of course, is Curie’s collaboration with her husband, Pierre, and their groundbreaking work on radioactivity. Sobel recreates the grim physical conditions of their laboratory — damp, unheated, and barely adequate — as they processed tons of pitchblende in search of new elements. From this laborious, back-breaking work came polonium and radium, discoveries that transformed physics and chemistry and ushered in a new understanding of atomic structure. Sobel’s descriptions of their scientific process are clear and engaging, balancing technical accuracy with narrative flow.

But The Elements of Marie Curie is not just about scientific triumph. Sobel also delves into the intense personal cost of Curie’s work. Pierre’s sudden death in 1906 left Marie a widow with two young daughters and a research program to sustain. Rather than retreat, she stepped into his professorship at the Sorbonne, becoming the university’s first female professor, and carried on their work alone. Sobel portrays this period with particular sensitivity, capturing both Curie’s grief and her resolve. Sobel shows Curie not as a mythic icon, but as a human being, enduring profound loss while pursuing the deepest questions of nature.

The book also explores Curie’s fraught relationship with fame and recognition. Sobel presents the sexism and xenophobia that dogged Curie throughout her career. She recounts the vicious press campaigns that followed her affair with fellow physicist Paul Langevin, the scandals that nearly derailed her career and overshadowed her second Nobel Prize. Yet even in the face of public humiliation, Curie refused to compromise her dedication to science in circumstances that would have crushed most people.

Sobel is particularly vivid on Curie’s war year, later years, and legacy. During World War I, she personally outfitted and drove mobile X-ray units to the front, saving countless lives and advancing medical technology. She also trained a generation of scientists: including her daughter Irène Joliot-Curie, who would go on to win a Nobel Prize herself. Marie and Irene are the only mother and daughter to win the Nobel Prize.  (Six father-son pairs have earned the Nobel Prize, most famously William Henry Bragg (father) and William Lawrence Bragg (son) who won the 1915 Nobel Prize in Physics together.)

What makes The Elements of Marie Curie stand out is its balance of science and storytelling. Sobel writes with clarity and elegance, never oversimplifying Curie’s work but always anchoring it in the human experience behind the science. The book is as much about persistence, courage, and identity as it is about radiation and elements. By the final pages, readers feel they know not only what Marie Curie discovered, but who she was in all of her complexity: a scientist, a mother, a widow, a patriot, and a pioneer. As Sobel said, “A scientist in the laboratory is not only a technician, but also a child confronted by natural phenomena more enchanting than any fairy tale.”

The Elements of Marie Curie is both a thorough introduction for those learning about Marie Curie for the first time and a portrait with a unique perspective for those already familiar with her legacy. Sobel weaves the story of the discovery of the structure of the atom into her narrative of Curie's life, which show just how rapidly the understanding of the atom and matter changed during Curie's lifetime, propelled in part by her discoveries.

On mark of Marie Curie's stature in the science community is that she was the only woman to attend all of the Solvay Conferences from their inception in 1911 to the conference in 1933 the year before her death.  In fact, only Paul Langevin also attended all of the conferences.  Other attendees included de Broglie, Einstein, Planck, Rutheford and other luminaries in the world of physics. Curie said of the conferences, “I take such great pleasure in speaking of new things with all these lovers of physics.” 

I loved the book. I have read several accounts of Marie Curie's life including a middle-school level biography in French. Each time I read about Curie I learn something new about her life. With Sobel's book, I felt most vividly how Marie Curie's life influenced the times she lived through.  



Saturday, April 2, 2022

The Five People I Would Love To Have Dinner With

Marie Curie after receiving the first of two Nobel Prizes

 A friend keeps a changing list of the five people she wants to have dinner with. It would be a one-time dinner party. The guests can be contemporary or from any time past. 

I like the idea and decided to make my own version. I get to pick the dinner venue and get to say at what age my guest joins the party. Even if they are living, I want to say at what age they are at dinner. At dinner, everyone is fluent in English, or maybe everyone is fluent in French, but no translators: we understand each other.

Also, I added a sixth guest whom I know is on the top of the guest list of the majority of the current world. 

 1.  Marie Curie at age 52. By the time Marie Curie was 52 years old, World War I had ended and she had achieved things no one thought possible.  In 1903 at age 34 she received the Nobel Prize in Physics for pioneering research in radiation. Eight years later she received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery of radium. She was the only person ever to win two Nobel Prizes in science. When World War I broke out she organized mobile x-ray labs that saved as many as a million lives of wounded soldiers. I want to talk to her when that terrible war is over.

2. Theodor Herzl at age 38. He is called the founder of Israel, yet he died more than 40 years before Israel became a country in 1948.  Herzl was the founder of modern Zionism and inspired Jews around the world to see the possibility of a Jewish homeland after 2,000 years of exile. In 1898 he went to Jerusalem at the same time as the Kaiser of Germany went to petition the Kaiser for support for a Jewish homeland. I want to talk to him after that trip.

3. John F. Kennedy at age 44. With nuclear threats by Russia in the air, I want to talk to JFK after he faced down the Soviet Union in the Cuban Missile Crisis. The world was on the brink of nuclear war, and Kennedy brought the confrontation to a peaceful conclusion.  Nikita Krushchev was out of power within two years after losing to Kennedy.  There is a lot to love in what JFK did. 

4.  Alexis de Tocqueville at age 30. In 1831, Alexis de Tocqueville began a nine-month journey in America. He was 26. In 1835, when he was 30, the first volume of his Democracy in America was published.  This 900-page book is the single best work ever published on politics in the United States of America, maybe the best book about America, period. Abridged versions omit the heart-rending descriptions of slavery and the treatment of the First Americans. When I read it again, I will read the translation by Harvey Mansfield. His lectures on Tocqueville are wonderful.

5.  Thomas Jefferson at age 33. In his biography of Thomas Jefferson, Jon Meacham describes a man who in  addition to all of his other qualities was a wonderful dinner guest. He would stop at a rural tavern and eat with whomever was at the table. One man wrote he only found out much later that the man who was curious about everything and everyone was also the man who wrote The Declaration of Independence.  In 1776 when he wrote the founding document of America, Jefferson was 33. In his draft, Jefferson called for the abolition of slavery in the new nation. The Continental Congress removed the passage.  I would like to have Jefferson at dinner before he became the 3rd President of the U.S.  In a famous toast at a White House dinner in honor of 49 Nobel Prize winners, President John F. Kennedy said, 

I think this is the most extraordinary collection of talent, of human knowledge, that has ever been gathered together at the White House, with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined alone.” 

6. Volodymyr Zelenskyy this month. Courage is always admirable and the center of the universe on the subject of courage is the President and people of Ukraine.  At the beginning of 2022, Volodymyr Zelensky was the unpopular President of a poor country. Now he is Winston S. Churchill in Eastern Europe, the spokesperson for Democracy, the leader of the nation fought the Russian army to a standstill against every prediction. Zelenskyy is 44 years old. May he live to be 100.

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Where with the dinner take place?  At Maison Fournaise. I wrote about this restaurant earlier this week. It is a victim of COVID, but it can come back for this dinner.  We will eat on the porch where Renoir painted "The Boating Party."



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