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The Movement of Stars

par Amy Brill

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3092884,673 (3.83)16
Amateur astronomer Hannah Gardner Price has lived all twenty-four years of her life according to the principles of the Nantucket Quaker community in which she was raised. Then she meets Isaac Martin, a young, dark-skinned whaler from the Azores who, like herself, has ambitions beyond his expected station in life. Drawn to his intellectual curiosity and honest manner, Hannah agrees to take Isaac on as a student. But when their shared interest in the stars develops into something deeper, Hannah's standing in the community begins to unravel.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 16 mentions

I picked this up on Friday night and finished it on Monday all while dealing with an all day conference, a six hour drive, working and being seriously distracted by the bombings at the Boston Marathon.

I identified with the bookish heroine and thank God that I was born into an age when being a woman doesn't hold me back from intellectual pursuits.

I don't read a lot of romance novels anymore but I deep down I do enjoy a good love story. This one is bittersweet and has some lovely, emotionally charged scenes.

Since Mother's Day is around the corner, I'll say this would be a great book to pick up for your Mom as a gift.

( )
  hmonkeyreads | Jan 25, 2024 |
This was an extraordinary book full of the inner dialogue of a brilliant woman. Modeled after a real life Northeastern woman astronomer, this fictional heroine lives during a time of strict rules imposed by the Nantucket Quakers on dress, actions, and education. Hannah Price lives at home with her father, her twin brother has earlier sailed out on a whaling vessel to earn the funds to marry. All Hannah wishes to do is watch the stars and gain the opportunity to control her own life. Into her life of measurement and repairing nautical instruments is a dark-skinned man from the Azores who wishes to become her student. So she takes up the offer and both their lives are changed.

Reading this book in this moment in modern history is timely: as the Quakers discuss the sin of slavery, they are also unable to fully accept the African Americans and darker skinned peoples on their island. Their patronizing attitude towards others speaks volumes towards the later "hands-off" view of Northern Reconstructionists who fail to honor true freedom, including voting rights, land rights, and freedom of movement, of newly freed slaves in the South.

Set in the 1840's, Hannah's story is well told and her internalized oppression is a literary triumph. She remains true to herself, mostly, and merely wants to stand on her own two feet, gazing at the stars, and earn her own way in the world. ( )
  threadnsong | Oct 11, 2020 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
With all the lights in cities and suburbia, it can be hard to look up and see the stars overhead. But when you get out into an area where the artificial lights don't overwhelm the stars, the night sky is magnificent. I have never learned the names of the constellations but that hasn't stopped me from wanting to lie down on the ground, look up, and just sink into the vastness of the universe. So I can certainly understand the fascination that astronomers have with stars and space and celestial objects. In Amy Brill's debut novel inspired by Maria Mitchell, the first American female astronomer, The Movement of Stars, a very unlikely character, a nineteenth Quaker woman, is seduced by science and the night sky.

Hannah Gardner Price lives on Nantucket in 1845 in the tightly knit, strict Quaker community there. Her father is a clockmaker and an astronomer and he has taught Hannah both his work and his passion. She is an intellectually curious young woman, drawn to the stars and the workings of the universe and as capable of scientific observation as he is. When her father, who has been long widowed, announces that he is going to marry and move to Philadelphia, he assumes that Hannah, as an unmarried daughter, will certainly be moving with him. She is desperate not to leave Nantucket and her observation of the night sky, searching as she is for an undiscovered comet so that she can claim King Gustav of Denmark's prize and the acclaim and recognition that goes with it.

While her father prepares to leave the island and Hannah considers her limited options, she takes on a student, teaching Isaac Martin, a dark skinned sailor from the Azores, celestial navigation so that he can advance in his field. Isaac is an outsider like Hannah, he for the color of his skin and his foreignness, she for her unfeminine craving for education and knowledge and her desire not to marry but instead to contribute to her chosen field. So it is no surprise that Hannah and Isaac are drawn to each other. But her association with this sailor will cost her in her little community despite the fact that she has always dutifully adhered to the letter of the rules they have set out.

Hannah not only flouts convention by rejecting the traditional women's sphere when her father was willing to accommodate her chosen life path but she continues to reject convention when it seems that she will be shunned entirely if she is not under the protection of a father, a husband, or her beloved twin brother, Edward, whose own wife is such a proper Quaker women that Hannah cannot see past her own prejudices to appreciate her new sister in law for the gifts that she does offer, like her acceptance and appreciation of Hannah's brilliant intelligence.

Brill has written a well-researched and interesting novel about the place of women in science and the obstacles that they had to overcome just to practice, never mind to shine and be outstanding. Hannah was a very smart character, quick to learn and willing to persevere in the face of disapproval but she wasn't quite as schooled in the way of emotions and relating to people and her relationship with Isaac teaches her to love out of more than obligation, to examine her feelings and to know her own heart. Their romance perhaps distracted a bit from the fascinating idea of this woman with her eyes trained on the sky, waiting for her comet to appear and to be confirmed but it did contribute to her eventual self-discovery and offered narrative tension of a different sort. Women's choices were so constrained and it took such strength of character for Hannah to pursue her loves, both of Isaac and of astronomy and choices she eventually made were certainly unique. The novel takes a little time to get going and the pacing speeds up quite a bit at the end but over all, this was a satisfying historical novel about one woman's personal and professional growth at a time when certainly the latter was disregarded as important. ( )
  whitreidtan | Jun 8, 2014 |
Amy Brill's The Movement of Stars is a must-read for any lover of historical fiction or literature infused with scientific discovery.

While many historical novels get bogged down in demonstrating the depth of their research (rather than telling their story well), Brill paints Hannah's Nantucket with deft, specific strokes that evoke rather than explicate. The description of the island's architecture is one example of Brill's attention to clearly researched detail that enhances the novel, and the portrayal of Hannah's astronomical research and discovery sparks with a well-tuned blend of innovation and the necessities of its period.

Brill doesn't shy away from the difficult realities of colonial Nantucket, either, and it's her—and Hannah's—willingness to confront and investigate complex questions of race, class, and religion, as well as the rights and opportunities afforded to women, that makes this novel so satisfying to read. There are no easy fixes in the novel, and there are no re-trodden descriptors in Brill's sentences.

The Movement of Stars is an ideal melding of historical fact and literary fiction with characters who move through a gracefully written world. ( )
  hmwendt | May 23, 2014 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 28 (suivant | tout afficher)
Probing yet accessible, beautifully written and richly characterized: fine work from a writer to watch.
ajouté par mysterymax | modifierKirkus Reviews (Feb 3, 2013)
 
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It is chiefly from the comets that spirit comes, which is indeed the smallest but the most subtle and useful part of our air, and so much required to sustain the life of all things with us. ~Isaac Newton
A great soul will be strong to live, as well as strong to think. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Amateur astronomer Hannah Gardner Price has lived all twenty-four years of her life according to the principles of the Nantucket Quaker community in which she was raised. Then she meets Isaac Martin, a young, dark-skinned whaler from the Azores who, like herself, has ambitions beyond his expected station in life. Drawn to his intellectual curiosity and honest manner, Hannah agrees to take Isaac on as a student. But when their shared interest in the stars develops into something deeper, Hannah's standing in the community begins to unravel.

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