Chiaverini’s novel is a wonderful blend of history and fiction, poetry and math. In Enchantress of Numbers, New York Times bestselling author Jennifer Chiaverini unveils the passions, dreams, and insatiable thirst for knowledge of a. Period fans will delight in the details of gowns, suitors, and rivals that fill the pages until Ada’s rapid romance with and then marriage to William, Lord King, who will eventually become the first Earl of Lovelace. Though Ada’s keen interest in mathematics is clear from almost the beginning, it is only her association with Charles Babbage that leads to her now-famous creation of the first ever computer program. Despite his absence, Ada credits the great poet with casting a shadow across her life, and her mother constantly searches for signs of Byron’s mania in her. Shortly after the birth of their only child, Augusta Ada Byron, in 1815, the pair split and Byron left England, never to return or see his daughter again. The couple had three children in quick succession, causing Lovelace to temporarily halt her studies. But in 1835, shortly after the two began working together, Lovelace met and married a baron named William King. The novel opens with a lengthy prologue imagining the courtship and brief marriage of the rather odious George Gordon Lord Byron, the sixth Baron Byron, and the restrained Anne Isabella Milbanke, eleventh Baroness Wentworth. Soon Lovelace became Babbage's protg it was Babbage who would eventually nickname her the Enchantress of Numbers. This intricate fictional memoir of Ada Lovelace, considered the first computer programmer, by Chiaverini ( Fates and Traitors) combines biography with the style of a novel of manners.
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