The Curious Death of Peter Artedi

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English

Told through the voice of a pivotal figure in the Age of Enlightenment, this entertaining work of historical fiction explores the world of old Amsterdam and the mysterious death of a young scientist. When Peter Artedi and Carl Linnaeus first meet in March 1729 as students at Uppsala University, they take an immediate liking to each other and soon form an intense intellectual bond. Sharing their revolutionary ideas about order and hierarchy in nature, the pair develop elaborate plans to classify plants and animals in ways never seen before—Linnaeus focusing on plants and Artedi concentrating on fishes. In September 1735, though, just as Artedi is set to publish his work, he drowns under puzzling circumstances. Following up on a pledge to his lost friend, Linnaeus retrieves Artedi’s manuscripts and has them published, not before he publishes his own work and makes a name for himself as a historical figure of epic proportions, while Artedi is quickly forgotten. This story about a little-known event from a key point in history investigates the untold tale behind the friendship of Linnaeus and Artedi and what may have actually happened between them.

English

Theodore W. Pietsch is the Dorothy T. Gilbert Professor in the school of aquatic and fishery sciences and curator of fishes at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture at the University of Washington–Seattle. He is the author of Fishes, Crayfishes, and Crabs; Frogfishes of the World; and Oceanic Anglerfishes. He lives in Seattle, Washington.

English

"A fictionalized portrait of a toweringly narcissistic Linnaeus . . . The result is both a sprightly tour of 18th-century biology and a twisty tale of a scientist trying to rationalize his own darker nature."  —Publishers Weekly

"A truly highbrow whodunit that will be of interest to readers of historical fiction, literary thrillers, and scientific history."  —Booklist, Starred Review"Splendidly illustrated monograph based on research that began with finding the first ceratioid washed ashore in Greenland in 1833 and continues through Pietsch's 40-year career of studying these fascinating fishes."  —Bruce B. Collette, National Marine Fisheries Service Systematics Laboratory, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institutition
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