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LIFE AFTER GRAVITY: Isaac Newton's London Career by Patricia Fara book review


Geographical Magazine
LIFE AFTER GRAVITY: Isaac Newton s London Career by Patricia Fara book review
Written by 
Kit Gillet
While most books on Isaac Newton choose to focus on his scientific career and legacy,
Life after Gravity starts at the point where Newton has already left Cambridge. Grey-haired at 54, he arrives in London in 1696 as the new Warden of the Mint, a place he would work at in various roles for the final three decades of his life.
London was an ideal location for an ambitious man determined to move up in the world, and with his investments in the East India Company and his salary, which grew to the equivalent of millions in today’s money, Newton could afford to live well. ‘Contradicting the myths of being an absent-minded, down-at-heel academic, this metropolitan Newton was clearly a big spender,’ writes Cambridge historian Patricia Fara. ....

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Geographical books to get you through lockdown this February


Geographical Magazine
Geographical books to get you through lockdown this February
Written by 
Geographical
THE VOLGA: A History of Russia s Greatest River by Janet M. Hartley
From the Nile to the Danube and Amazon, mighty rivers have shaped world history. The Volga, the longest river in Europe, at 3,530 kilometres (2,193 miles), is well and truly in that category. Flowing from the northwest of Moscow to the Caspian Sea, ‘through the forest zone of northern European Russia to the steppe and then to arid semi-desert in the south of Russia’, the Volga shaped the patterns of trade and exchange for both Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union, and is still of great importance today, writes Janet M. Hartley. ....

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