Review The Signature of All Things is that rare literary achievement: a big panoramic novel about life and love that captures the idiom and tenor of its age.-- "Washington Post"[A] sweeping tale of one family's journey from rags to riches...With such a massive narrative task at hand, narrator Stevenson never ceases to impress...Her English accent and sensitive but firm reading perfectly matches the author's prose.-- "Publishers Weekly (starred audio review)"A fabulous read...Gilbert has returned to fiction with a boisterous historical novel about a nineteenth-century botanist named Alma Whittaker...Alma's fabulous brain is a hot pot of scientific knowledge, lonely feminist turmoil, and erotic longing, all of which makes her an irresistible character to accompany through history and around the world.-- "People"After thirteen years as a memoirist, Elizabeth Gilbert has returned to fiction, and clearly she's reveling in all its pleasures and possibilities...There is much pleasure in this unhurried, sympathetic, intelligent novel by an author confident in her material and her form.-- "Publishers Weekly (starred review) "An incandescent and riveting character study, The Signature of All Things is a century-spanning tale of discovery and unconventional love...Impeccable botanical research informs the story, yet is written in an easily digestible manner for the uninitiated...The novel's exploration of women's roles in nineteenth-century academia makes it something of a parable for modern gender imbalances.-- "RT Book Reviews (4 1/2 stars) "Gilbert has mulled, from the confines of her desk, the correlations of nature, the principle that connects a grain of sand to a galaxy, to create a character who does the same-who makes the study of existence her life's purpose. And in doing so, she has written the novel of a lifetime.-- "O, The Oprah Magazine"Gilbert, in supreme command of her material, effortlessly invokes the questing spirit of the nineteenth century, when amateur explorers, naturalists, and enthusiasts were making major contributions to progress. Beautifully written and imbued with a reverence for science and for learning, this is a must-read.-- "Booklist (starred review)"Gilbert's descriptions of Henry's childhood, expeditions and life at the luxurious White Acre estate are superb. The dense, descriptive writing seems lifted from pages written two centuries past, yet it's laced with spare ironical touches and elegant phrasing...Characters leap into life, visible and vibrant...Multiple narrative threads weave seamlessly into a saga reminiscent of T. C. Boyle's Water Music...A brilliant exercise of intellect and imagination.-- "Kirkus Reviews (starred review)"Gilbert's...first work of fiction in thirteen years...has the elegant sheen of a nineteenth-century epic, but its concerns-the intersection of science and faith, the feminine struggle for fulfillment, the dubious rise of the pharmaceutical industry-are essentially modern...A rousing homage to the literary heroes she grew up reading.-- "New York Times"Juliet Stevenson narrates impeccably, providing superb, authentic accents...Powerful storytelling combined with a compelling voice create a spellbinding listening experience.-- "Booklist (starred audio review)"Ms. Gilbert has turned out the most ambitious and purely imaginative work in her twenty-year career: a deeply researched and vividly rendered historical novel about a nineteenth-century female botanist.-- "Wall Street Journal"Raucously ingenious...Not just a historical novel that spans two centuries and many geographies...I found unshackled joy on every page...A novel of brave and lovely ideas.-- "Chicago Tribune"Real events provide ample substrate for a novel that entwines the historic and the imagined so subtly as to read like good nonfiction for most of its first half. It crosses over to page turner after the introduction of the author's most beguiling invention, the deliciously named Ambrose Pike...The book's loc
Literature & FictionGenre FictionFamily SagaHistoricalUnited States
Elizabeth Gilbert is an award-winning writer of both fiction and non-fiction. Her short story collection Pilgrims was a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway award, and her novel Stern Men was a New York Times notable book. Her 2002 book The Last American Man was a finalist for both the National Book Award and the National Book Critic’s Circle Award.
Her memoir, Eat, Pray, Love, spent 57 weeks in the #1 spot on the New York Times paperback bestseller list. It has shipped over 6 million copies in the US and has been published in over thirty languages. A film adaptation of the book was released by Columbia Pictures.
Review The Signature of All Things is that rare literary achievement: a big panoramic novel about life and love that captures the idiom and tenor of its age.-- "Washington Post"[A] sweeping tale of one family's journey from rags to riches...With such a massive narrative task at hand, narrator Stevenson never ceases to impress...Her English accent and sensitive but firm reading perfectly matches the author's prose.-- "Publishers Weekly (starred audio review)"A fabulous read...Gilbert has returned to fiction with a boisterous historical novel about a nineteenth-century botanist named Alma Whittaker...Alma's fabulous brain is a hot pot of scientific knowledge, lonely feminist turmoil, and erotic longing, all of which makes her an irresistible character to accompany through history and around the world.-- "People"After thirteen years as a memoirist, Elizabeth Gilbert has returned to fiction, and clearly she's reveling in all its pleasures and possibilities...There is much pleasure in this unhurried, sympathetic, intelligent novel by an author confident in her material and her form.-- "Publishers Weekly (starred review) "An incandescent and riveting character study, The Signature of All Things is a century-spanning tale of discovery and unconventional love...Impeccable botanical research informs the story, yet is written in an easily digestible manner for the uninitiated...The novel's exploration of women's roles in nineteenth-century academia makes it something of a parable for modern gender imbalances.-- "RT Book Reviews (4 1/2 stars) "Gilbert has mulled, from the confines of her desk, the correlations of nature, the principle that connects a grain of sand to a galaxy, to create a character who does the same-who makes the study of existence her life's purpose. And in doing so, she has written the novel of a lifetime.-- "O, The Oprah Magazine"Gilbert, in supreme command of her material, effortlessly invokes the questing spirit of the nineteenth century, when amateur explorers, naturalists, and enthusiasts were making major contributions to progress. Beautifully written and imbued with a reverence for science and for learning, this is a must-read.-- "Booklist (starred review)"Gilbert's descriptions of Henry's childhood, expeditions and life at the luxurious White Acre estate are superb. The dense, descriptive writing seems lifted from pages written two centuries past, yet it's laced with spare ironical touches and elegant phrasing...Characters leap into life, visible and vibrant...Multiple narrative threads weave seamlessly into a saga reminiscent of T. C. Boyle's Water Music...A brilliant exercise of intellect and imagination.-- "Kirkus Reviews (starred review)"Gilbert's...first work of fiction in thirteen years...has the elegant sheen of a nineteenth-century epic, but its concerns-the intersection of science and faith, the feminine struggle for fulfillment, the dubious rise of the pharmaceutical industry-are essentially modern...A rousing homage to the literary heroes she grew up reading.-- "New York Times"Juliet Stevenson narrates impeccably, providing superb, authentic accents...Powerful storytelling combined with a compelling voice create a spellbinding listening experience.-- "Booklist (starred audio review)"Ms. Gilbert has turned out the most ambitious and purely imaginative work in her twenty-year career: a deeply researched and vividly rendered historical novel about a nineteenth-century female botanist.-- "Wall Street Journal"Raucously ingenious...Not just a historical novel that spans two centuries and many geographies...I found unshackled joy on every page...A novel of brave and lovely ideas.-- "Chicago Tribune"Real events provide ample substrate for a novel that entwines the historic and the imagined so subtly as to read like good nonfiction for most of its first half. It crosses over to page turner after the introduction of the author's most beguiling invention, the deliciously named Ambrose Pike...The book's loc
Literature & FictionGenre FictionFamily SagaHistoricalUnited States
Elizabeth Gilbert is an award-winning writer of both fiction and non-fiction. Her short story collection Pilgrims was a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway award, and her novel Stern Men was a New York Times notable book. Her 2002 book The Last American Man was a finalist for both the National Book Award and the National Book Critic’s Circle Award.
Her memoir, Eat, Pray, Love, spent 57 weeks in the #1 spot on the New York Times paperback bestseller list. It has shipped over 6 million copies in the US and has been published in over thirty languages. A film adaptation of the book was released by Columbia Pictures.