Promising the full story of a passionate life in science, Susan Quinn
delivers the goods in the paperback of her excellent biography Marie Curie
(Addison-Wesley, $16, ISBN 0 201 88794 0), reviewed last year in
hardback. Saddest to read is the episode in which Curie is pilloried by the
popular press, which labelled her unfeminine because of her scientific work,
when she had an affair with a fellow scientist. The scandal nearly lost her her
second Nobel prize.
More from New Scientist
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending New Scientist articles
1
The world's fastest spider tops 3.5 metres per second
2
A type of fibre that stimulates GLP-1 release approved for use in food
3
Where, when and how to watch the 2026 solar eclipse
4
The weirdness of neutrinos could completely rewrite particle physics
5
Babies are born with the neural foundations for maths
6
We’re not the most successful human species
7
The best new science-fiction novels published in July 2026
8
Have scientists really made a living cell from scratch? Not quite
9
We’ve uncovered a master gene that switches on human development
10
US government wants to have a useful quantum computer by 2028



