"Fascinating."<b>—<i>Publishers Weekly </i></b>
"The periodic chart now hangs on the wall of countless classrooms, and occupies textbooks, websites and T-shirts. . . . Working long before nuclear scientists reached Los Alamos, Mendeleev was this kingdom’s first successful cartographer."<b>—Simon Schaffer, <i>London Review of Books </i></b>
"Engaging. . . . [T]he most comprehensive biography in English about Mendeleev."<b>—Ursula Klein,<i> Physics Today </i></b>
"Highly readable."<b>—Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent, <i>Nature </i></b>
"This fine book presents a compelling portrait of Mendeleev as a Russian thinker, a member of the small cohort of Petersburg elite who shaped Russian science, politics, and culture. . . . For anyone interested in Mendeleev or the place of science in late nineteenth-century Russia, this is required reading."<b>—Mark B. Adams, <i>Slavic Review </i></b>
"A serious and interesting exploration of the life and times of Dmitrii Mendeleev."<b>—Carmen Giunta, <i>Foundations of Chemistry </i></b>
"The periodic chart now hangs on the wall of countless classrooms, and occupies textbooks, websites and T-shirts. . . . Working long before nuclear scientists reached Los Alamos, Mendeleev was this kingdom’s first successful cartographer."—Simon Schaffer, London Review of Books
"Engaging. . . . [T]he most comprehensive biography in English about Mendeleev."—Ursula Klein, Physics Today
"Highly readable."—Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent, Nature
"This fine book presents a compelling portrait of Mendeleev as a Russian thinker, a member of the small cohort of Petersburg elite who shaped Russian science, politics, and culture. . . . For anyone interested in Mendeleev or the place of science in late nineteenth-century Russia, this is required reading."—Mark B. Adams, Slavic Review
"A serious and interesting exploration of the life and times of Dmitrii Mendeleev."—Carmen Giunta, Foundations of Chemistry