Of the 72 scientific names engraved on the Eiffel Tower, none is female. Omissions include the six Enlightenment women dubbed Minervas sisters by historian Nina Gelbart in her pioneering, evocative rescue.Nature
[ An] illuminating collective biography. . . . Gelbarts vibrant prose both instructs and pleases.Kenneth Loiselle, H-France Review
Minervas French Sisters is a major contribution to the history of Enlightenment science and culture.Tom Stammers, British Journal for the History of Science
Awarded a Coup de Coeurs by the American Library in Paris
Minervas French Sisters will be a crucial addition to the scholarship on Enlightenment natural science and philosophy, greatly enhancing our knowledge and understanding of the contributions French women made to these fields.Judith P. Zinsser, author of Emilie Du Chātelet: Daring Genius of the Enlightenment
In this remarkable volume about remarkable women, Gelbart brilliantly locates six forgotten figures of the Enlightenment in private and public contexts.Jeffrey Merrick, University of WisconsinMilwaukee
Written with verve and panache, Minervas French Sisters offers an imaginative account of six French womens engagement with the chauvinist world of Enlightenment science. It is also a timely reminder of gender issues that are still with us.Colin Jones, Queen Mary University of London
From thousands of slivers of mostly second-hand evidence, Nina Gelbart re-creates the little-known stories of Enlightenment women scientists and their celebrity milieu. A unique scholarly accomplishment, Minervas French Sisters is also an imaginative and riveting history.Bonnie G. Smith, author of Women in World History since 1450
Minervas French Sisters collects the fascinating stories of six boundary-breaking women, who found their own paths to science in Enlightenment France. Their examples still shine today!Patrice Bret, Centre Alexandre Koyré, Paris This is a wonderful book, utterly engrossing as it enters into the lives of long-neglected women scientists, converses with them, and illuminates the Enlightenment world they negotiated.Keith Michael Baker, Stanford University