![]() What really burns one up isn’t reading page after page about how ill-used Marić was by her philandering husband, or how thoroughly he derailed her career and life, but the knowledge that this story isn’t entirely a relic of the past. To be blunt, Benedict’s exploration of this unfortunate woman’s life makes you mad, and that’s probably the point. The two met at Zurich Polytechnic as students in 1896, embarked on a passionate affair and launched a turbulent, 13-year marriage in 1903. Fortunately, Marie Benedict’s tragic, crisply told novel isn’t about Albert, but about his Serbian, almost-as-brilliant first wife, Mileva Marić, who narrates it. ![]() ![]() Like so many male genius-types, Albert Einstein’s behavior toward at least one woman who supported him was revolting. ![]()
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