The Principle
By (Author) Jerome Ferrari
Translated by Howard Curtis
Europa Editions
Europa Editions
22nd February 2017
United States
General
Fiction
843.92
Paperback
144
Width 135mm, Height 210mm
Beguiled by the figure of German physicist Werner Heisenberg, who, with his notorious uncertainty principle disrupted the assumptions behind quantum mechanics, earning him the Nobel Prize in physics in 1932, a young, disenchanted philosopher attempts to right his own intellectual and emotional course, and take the measure of the evil at work in the contemporary world.
Praise for The Principle
"A work of endless density and power...hauntingly beautiful."
--Le Monde
"Indeed, what is ultimately at stake in quantum theories is a question of language and the limitations of language in describing reality. Hence, an ideal topic to bridge science and literature, which Ferrari does masterfully in The Principle. [...] I was impressed by the beauty and depth of this short, dense book on the ultimate human choice."
--European Literature Network
"The epistolary effect of a narrative addressed to its subject is daring and uncommon, but in this case it works, part accusation, part plea, part quest and inquest. An elegant, cheerless meditation on how even the brightest people can find it in themselves to accommodate evil on the way to annihilation."
--Kirkus Reviews
"Ferrari beautifully portrays the destabilizing way new theories disrupt and disorient what's come before."
--Public Books
"The extreme beauty of Ferrari's language serves well his poetic expressive intelligence, allowing him to approach the unknown and hostile continent of quantum physics. A fascinating dive into a novelistic and entirely unexpected experience."
--L'Orient Littraire
"The power of Jrme Ferrari's writing resides in its precision, its delicate lyricism, which is evident from the very first sentences, and its metaphysical questioning. The reader will find this combination intoxicating."
--La Cause Littraire
"With a construction as precise as that of a theorem, The Principle moves beyond the single evocation of a life and its murky areas to better interrogate the basis of all truth."
--L'Express
"A sparse, elegant story."
--Historical Novels Review
Praise for Jrme Ferrari
"A novelist whose concern with how we should live and what we can believe
puts him in the tradition of Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus."
--Allan Massie, The Scotsman
"Astute, cunning, brilliant...[Sermon of the Fall of Rome] is an earthy, philosophical tract drawing on history and human experience."
--The Irish Times
JUrPme Ferrari is a writer and translator born in 1968 in Paris. His 2012 novel, The Sermon on the Fall of Rome, won the Goncourt Prize. He is also the author of Where I Left My Soul (MacLehose, 2012). He teaches philosophy at the French School of Abu Dhabi.