The Movement of Stars
By Amy Brill
By Amy Brill
By Amy Brill
By Amy Brill
Category: Historical Fiction | Literary Fiction | Spiritual Fiction
Category: Historical Fiction | Literary Fiction | Spiritual Fiction
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$17.00
May 06, 2014 | ISBN 9781594632372
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Apr 18, 2013 | ISBN 9781101602058
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Praise
“Amy Brill shines in her sparkling debut novel, The Movement of Stars, inspired by the work of a 19th-century female astronomer.” —Elissa Schappell, Vanity Fair
“Brill’s rich detail and research are hugely impressive; it’s easy to envision the scenes she sees.”—USA Today
“A young woman has her eyes opened to her community’s limitations—and her own—in . . . Brill’s strong debut. . . . Probing yet accessible, beautifully written and richly characterized: fine work from a writer to watch.”—Kirkus (starred review)
“Vividly told and meticulously researched, Amy Brill’s The Movement of Stars is one of the year’s finest debut novels.”—largehearted boy
“Brill has created a compelling and likable character in Hannah Price; it’s easy to root for her to find her comet and acknowledge her feelings for Isaac. Hannah’s search during a period of great discovery and advancement in astronomy, as well as her relationship with Isaac amid widespread abolitionist sentiments, adds up to a stirring historical drama.”—Booklist
“A determined young woman, born into a Quaker community in 19th-century Nantucket, defies social norms on the path to becoming a ‘lady astronomer’ in Brill’s charming debut novel. . . . From the main streets of Nantucket to its dunes and shores, from a Harvard observatory to the cities of Europe, Hannah’s emotional and professional journey will please.”—Publishers Weekly
“In Hannah, Amy Brill has fashioned an extraordinary character and quiet hero—a woman who charts her own course, and who places knowledge and her own soul’s independence up with the highest, brightest stars. Nineteenth century Nantucket feels pressing and wholly vivid in this novel, and the love story at its heart blazes with real feeling and intensity. A terrifically poised and captivating debut.”—Paula McLain, author of The Paris Wife
“A spectacular debut. Amy Brill skillfully combines a forbidden love story, the struggle for women’s rights, and early scientific exploration of the heavens. I cheered for Hannah Price, our feisty heroine, as she unraveled the mystery of her own desires while burning a trail for other women to follow.”—Hannah Tinti, author of The Good Thief
“A bittersweet story, movingly told. Amy Brill’s learned and informative novel captures the unique character of mid-nineteenth century Nantucket through the life of Hannah Gardner Price, a talented amateur astronomer. Brill’s uncluttered prose mirrors her heroine’s clear eye and Quaker reserve as Hannah explores both the expanding universe and her burgeoning emotions—amid increasingly binding circumstances. A delicately handled love story, and a convincing look at the island rituals of a New England whaling community.”—Daphne Kalotay, author of Russian Winter
“Amy Brill shines in her sparkling debut novel, The Movement of Stars, inspired by the work of a 19th-century female astronomer.” —Elissa Schappell, Vanity Fair
“Brill’s rich detail and research are hugely impressive; it’s easy to envision the scenes she sees.”—USA Today
“Read three sentences of Amy Brill’s gorgeous The Movement of Stars and you’re swiftly transported to the lantern-lit past of 1840s Quaker Nantucket… This book sings with insights about love, work and how we create our own families.” —Oprah.com
“On Nantucket in the 1800s, Hannah Price struggles to obey her Quaker community while becoming an astronomer—her dream. Then exotic Isaac Martin asks to study with her, and she finds she has a lot to learn about love. Inspired by real-life astronomer Maria Mitchell, Brill’s Hannah lights the way, like a comet, for women whose minds and hearts lead them beyond boundaries.”—People
“In a Nantucket whaling town, Hannah, a 24-year-old Quaker with a knack for navigation and an obsession with the night sky, teams up with an unintentionally controversial man who turns her world upside down.”—Marie Claire
“[An] unforgettable main character: Hannah Price has raised sleep deprivation to an art form in Amy Brill’s strong debut novel, The Movement of Stars… Brill conveys both Hannah’s love for her work and the cramped nature of the society that she outgrew without realizing it.”—The Christian Science Monitor
“An inspiring tale that is full of twists.”—Bust
“Brill spins a luxurious romance about stargazing and star-crossing. Hannah Gardner Price, the heroine, driven to succeed in her field and steadfast in her right to do so, eventually becomes embroiled in an interracial romance with Isaac, an Azorean whaler she takes on as a student. Though the setting and subject may brand this a historical novel, the conflicts ring sharply contemporary—career vs. family, racial tension vs. love.”—The Village Voice
“Author Amy Brill combines several themes—women’s rights, closed faith communities, life in an isolated place, practicing one’s spirituality, pursuing one’s dreams—and weaves them into a well-researched, well-written and entirely believable story that readers will enjoy because the themes are timeless.”—Bookreporter.com
“Brill’s debut raises thought-provoking questions on the limitations to achievement societies impose based on race, gender, or divergent beliefs. For readers of historical fiction, particularly those with an interest in science, who savor the unfolding of a character’s emotional and intellectual development.”—Library Journal
“A young woman has her eyes opened to her community’s limitations—and her own—in . . . Brill’s strong debut. . . . Probing yet accessible, beautifully written and richly characterized: fine work from a writer to watch.”—Kirkus (starred review)
“Vividly told and meticulously researched, Amy Brill’s The Movement of Stars is one of the year’s finest debut novels.”—largehearted boy
“Brill has created a compelling and likable character in Hannah Price; it’s easy to root for her to find her comet and acknowledge her feelings for Isaac. Hannah’s search during a period of great discovery and advancement in astronomy, as well as her relationship with Isaac amid widespread abolitionist sentiments, adds up to a stirring historical drama.”—Booklist
“A determined young woman, born into a Quaker community in 19th-century Nantucket, defies social norms on the path to becoming a ‘lady astronomer’ in Brill’s charming debut novel. . . . From the main streets of Nantucket to its dunes and shores, from a Harvard observatory to the cities of Europe, Hannah’s emotional and professional journey will please.”—Publishers Weekly
“In Hannah, Amy Brill has fashioned an extraordinary character and quiet hero—a woman who charts her own course, and who places knowledge and her own soul’s independence up with the highest, brightest stars. Nineteenth century Nantucket feels pressing and wholly vivid in this novel, and the love story at its heart blazes with real feeling and intensity. A terrifically poised and captivating debut.”—Paula McLain, author of The Paris Wife
“A spectacular debut. Amy Brill skillfully combines a forbidden love story, the struggle for women’s rights, and early scientific exploration of the heavens. I cheered for Hannah Price, our feisty heroine, as she unraveled the mystery of her own desires while burning a trail for other women to follow.”—Hannah Tinti, author of The Good Thief
“A bittersweet story, movingly told. Amy Brill’s learned and informative novel captures the unique character of mid-nineteenth century Nantucket through the life of Hannah Gardner Price, a talented amateur astronomer. Brill’s uncluttered prose mirrors her heroine’s clear eye and Quaker reserve as Hannah explores both the expanding universe and her burgeoning emotions—amid increasingly binding circumstances. A delicately handled love story, and a convincing look at the island rituals of a New England whaling community.”—Daphne Kalotay, author of Russian Winter
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