What is made abundantly clear, however, is what it was like to live in the shadow of Albert Einstein. Careful and thorough research that includes everything from the couple's old school records to letters written between the two reveal what Marić actually did do and places her within the context of women's struggle to enter the world of science at the turn of the twentieth century. The book does reveal that success is not based in gender but in opportunity, encouragement, and education, and that denying such things to women is a sorry waste of gifts much needed by a troubled world.
ForeWord Reviews
The issue of the contributions made by Einstein's first wife to his theories has been ensnared in controversy and fraught with ideological agendas. In this deeply researched and scrupulously fair book, we get the true story of Mileva Marić, which is far more interesting and even inspiring than the myths.
Walter Isaacson, Professor of History, Tulane University; author of Einstein: His Life and Universe
Einstein was, for his time, remarkably supportive of women scientists—Marie Curie, Emmy Noether, Lise Meitner, Marietta Blau—with, sadly, the exception of his first wife, Mileva Marić. This is her story, and theirs, told as truthfully as modern methods in history of science research can make it.
Virginia L. Trimble, Professor of Physics & Astronomy, University of California Irvine
This thoroughly researched volume constitutes a much needed corrective to the proliferation of urban myths about Mileva Einstein, her husband Albert Einstein, and their individual and joint paths through the Swiss educational system. Their accomplishments and failures, and the environment in which they rejoiced and struggled, are amply illustrated in the original documents presented here. The authors have succeeded in bringing our understanding of their work up to date, and have debunked past and recent tendentious or incorrect accounts.
Diana L. Kormos-Buchwald, Robert M. Abbey Professor of History, California Institute of Technology
Ultimately, the authors conclude, buying into myths about Mileva Einstein-Marić does her a further injustice by denying her a unique place in scientific history…Hers is 'the very human, real story of a fallible, yet brave and determined young woman who, for various reasons, was not able to fulfill her dreams for the career and marriage she had hoped for.' Given the barriers women in science still face, her story remains relevant.
Washington Post
Throughout history Albert Einstein's first wife, Mileva Marić, was practically written out of the great physicist's story. Later she was credited as a secret collaborator on his most famous theories. Scholar Esterson and science historian Cassidy aim to set the record straight in this compelling biography. They pore over school transcripts, letters and contemporary accounts to assemble a cohesive picture of Marić's life. She overcame bias against women in science to pursue a Ph.D. in physics—but ultimately gave up her career when she married Einstein. As his confidant and study partner during his university days, Marić undoubtedly did contribute to Einstein's development as a scientist. But the authors find no evidence that she was a co-inventor of relativity, as some have claimed. 'Tragically,' they write, 'she did not achieve her full potential as a scientist... nor did she realize her hopes and dreams in marriage and in life.'"
Scientific American
Somewhere under the noise and dust is the real person whom Cassidy's evidence shows: an intelligent woman who worked hard to get an intellectually demanding education and suffered deep personal blows on top of the deeper bruise of being the wrong gender at the turn of the wrong century. Our century needs to attend to her. The deck is still stacked against female scientists. A Mileva Marić coming of age in the twenty-first century would still face lack of credit — and it would be only one in a long list of barriers and biases.
Nature
What emerges instead is a portrait of a capable but frustrated young woman who tragically did not achieve her full potential as a scientist...This biography of Einstein's forgotten first wife instead offers a haunting indictment of Albert as a distant and ultimately disloyal companion: a quantum husband who was neither here nor there; a visionary who saw the starlight in the universe but not the darkness closer to home.
Financial Times
Evidence-based biographies such as Einstein's Wife are essential.
Science
...the book represents an impressive, compassionate accomplishment.
The Spectator
Einstein's Wife reconstructs Mariic's early life fairly and accurately. The compact volume will be an informative addition to library collections and a fascinating account for curious readers.
Physics Today
Einstein's Wife provides at last an authoritative account of Mileva Einstein-Maric´'s real standing in history. It is also a case study of a painstaking pursuit of the facts against the background of a long history of mythologizing. And finally, it answers the nagging question of why such extensive and painstaking historical research is truly needed.
Physics in Perspective
What is made abundantly clear, however, is what it was like to live in the shadow of Albert Einstein. Careful and thorough research that includes everything from the couple's old school records to letters written between the two reveal what Marić actually did do and places her within the context of women's struggle to enter the world of science at the turn of the twentieth century. The book does reveal that success is not based in gender but in opportunity, encouragement, and education, and that denying such things to women is a sorry waste of gifts much needed by a troubled world.
ForeWord Reviews
Einstein's Wife provides an extremely valuable contextualization of Marić's undoubted achievement in blazing a trail for women in science.
Times Literary Supplement