Kadomi reviewed The signature of all things by Elizabeth Gilbert
Review of 'The signature of all things' on 'Goodreads'
3 stars
Theoretically, totally my cup of tea. Historical fiction with a female scientist and all around intelligent woman set in the early 19th century. The story starts totally captivatingly with the tales of the protagonist's father and his rise to becoming a millionaire rich botanist. I never wanted it to end.
The protagonist's name is Alma Whittaker, only child of above mentioned botanist, and she herself is raised to be a botanist and learned woman, uncommon for the age. Of course she's also very unattractive and turns into an old spinster whose ultimate dream in life is to suck on some guy's cock. She gets married eventually, but it's not a happy marriage, and eventually she ends up on Tahiti as part of some general soul-finding.
I pretty much loved the book until a) Alma discovered her sexuality and b) she got married. I don't mean to kinkshame Alma, but it …
Theoretically, totally my cup of tea. Historical fiction with a female scientist and all around intelligent woman set in the early 19th century. The story starts totally captivatingly with the tales of the protagonist's father and his rise to becoming a millionaire rich botanist. I never wanted it to end.
The protagonist's name is Alma Whittaker, only child of above mentioned botanist, and she herself is raised to be a botanist and learned woman, uncommon for the age. Of course she's also very unattractive and turns into an old spinster whose ultimate dream in life is to suck on some guy's cock. She gets married eventually, but it's not a happy marriage, and eventually she ends up on Tahiti as part of some general soul-finding.
I pretty much loved the book until a) Alma discovered her sexuality and b) she got married. I don't mean to kinkshame Alma, but it just changed the tone from a colorful, historical tale to the sad story of a sexually repressed spinster.
It was beautifully written, and I would try more books by the author, but it could have made me much much happier than it ultimately did.