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The Periodic Table (Essential Penguin)

The Periodic Table (Essential Penguin)

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Author: Primo Levi
Creator: Raymond Rosenthal
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £8.99
Buy New: £3.68
You Save: £5.31 (59%)



New (16) Used (6) from £2.50

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 15 reviews
Sales Rank: 133704

Media: Paperback
Edition: New Ed
Pages: 208
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.1 x 0.6

ISBN: 0140296611
Dewey Decimal Number: 808
EAN: 9780140296617
ASIN: 0140296611

Publication Date: February 22, 2001
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New. Shipped from UK Mainland. Delivery is usually 2 - 3 working days from order by Royal Mail, International Delivery is by Airmail.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The Periodic Table (Penguin Modern Classics)
  • Paperback - The Periodic Table (Abacus Books)
  • Hardcover - The Periodic Table (Everyman's Library Classics & Contemporary Classics)
  • Paperback - The Periodic Table ('Zhou qi biao', in traditional Chinese, NOT in English)
  • Paperback - The Periodic Table
  • Hardcover - The Periodic Table
  • School & Library Binding - Periodic Table
  • Hardcover - The Periodic Table (Everyman's Library Classics)
  • Paperback - The Periodic Table

Similar Items:

  • If Not Now, When? (Penguin Modern Classics)
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  • If This Is a Man, and The Truce (Everyman's Library Classics)
  • The Tin Drum (Vintage Classics)
  • Austerlitz

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Writer Primo Levi (1919-1987), an Italian Jew, did not come to the wide attention of the English-reading audience until the last years of his life. A survivor of the Holocaust and imprisonment in Auschwitz, Levi is considered to be one of the century's most compelling voices, and The Periodic Table is his most famous book. Taking the knowledge he gained from his training as a chemist, Levi uses the elements as metaphors to create a cycle of linked, somewhat autobiographical tales, including stories of the Piedmontese Jewish community he came from, and of his response to the Holocaust.


Customer Reviews:   Read 10 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Carphone Warehouse Book Club's favorite read in 2007   July 31, 2008
ajk77 (london)
The unusual form of the book, each chapter relating to an element of the periodic table (not every element is included), to tell the tale of a chemist's life is highly effective. The content reinforces the form and the form the content to give a really high quality novel.

This was our group's favorite book by a modest lead over Lolita and The Master and Margarita. It is beautiful and moving and much more enjoyable than his good but harrowing Auschwitz tales.

Please do not be put off by the slow start - Argon is a very thin, rare gas and this chapter is one of the least engaging perhaps for that reason. Iron was most people's favorite element.



5 out of 5 stars Autobiographical Stories, Beautifully Translated   June 21, 2008
Jeremy Hawker (Norway)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I saw a negative review here, and I want to speak in this book's defence. Not that the great Primo Levi should need me, but The Periodic Table is the book I have most enjoyed reading in the past couple of years and so I don't want people to get the wrong impression of what it is.

For most of his working life Levi was a professional chemist, who just wrote on the side. Almost every chapter is a story from his remarkable life (two chapters are fiction); each has a chemical element for its title and that element appears somehow in the story, either literally or metaphorically. In the first chapter, Levi tells something of the history of his family: Jews in southern France, Venice and lastly in the city of Turin, where Primo Levi grew up (except during the war he lived in the same apartment for his whole life). The first chapter is slightly harder going than the rest of the book (it has interesting information about some Hebrew names and how they were twisted via French into the local Piedmontese dialect), and I think that's where some readers got stuck -- too bad, because once you get further it gives a nice balance to the rest. Then there are stories about his interest in chemistry as a child, mixing things up and causing explosions, his university education, how Fascism started to become a factor in his life as a young man, and then the story of how as a captured anti-fascist fighter he, amazingly, got himself sent to Auschwitz as a Jew in order to avoid being shot by the Fascists as 'a traitor'. There is one Auschwitz chapter, then stories of Levi's return after the war to Turin where he became the head of the chemistry department at a paint factory (apparently he became an expert in the chemistry of varnishes, though the book doesn't say so).

Chemistry is not the most obvious raw material for a writer of Levi's calibre, that is what makes the book unique. He lays out how it crisscrossed the path of his life from the nineteen-thirties through to the eighties. Some of the incidents are exotic or dangerous, others are prosaic but Levi's extraordinary power of observation, his eye for a curious detail, runs all the way through. You have to concentrate to make the most of this book, but it is worth the effort. And, by the end, you have learnt a little chemistry too.

Really, I cannot recommend The Periodic Table highly enough to do it justice. Raymond Rosenthal's translation is beautifully done; the English doesn't disturb the original. Translated Italian can easily become very turgid, but Rosenthal avoids that. There is a good introduction by Philip Roth, in which he tells of meeting Primo Levi in the 1980s. Honestly, for this price what a deal. Do yourself a favour and buy this book now.



3 out of 5 stars A difficult book- review by 'Keyne Readers'   June 17, 2008
G. E. Kirkup (Milton Keynes UK)
1 out of 3 found this review helpful

This turned out not to be a good choice for us. Many of the group did not manage to read much of the book. There were a variety of individual reasons, but perhaps the book is simply difficult to engage with, and uncomfortable when you do. A number of people started it but turned to lighter books for bedtime and holiday reading (which is when most of us do our reading for this group, so heavyweight reading does not go down well). Chapter 1 in particular was not popular. People struggled with it. Someone remarked that there were just too many characters. One member had a copy of the book on her shelves for 20 years and had never got round to reading it. She got bogged down in the first chapter, but persisted and found the book got better as she read alter chapters. Some people liked the fact that they could dip into chapters that were of different styles and different lengths.

One of the group remembered that she had once worked on a course that used something of his called `The Mark of a Chemist', about learning to be a professional chemist. We discussed whether reading The Periodic Table would enthuse anyone to become a chemist. Some of us (non-chemists) felt that we got a sense of his excitement and passion for his work, and thre were places where we laughed at his mis-haps. Our professional chemistry academic loved it, but someone else who had studied chemistry with other sciences felt that she couldn't relate it to the chemistry she knew. For some it reminded them of why they gave up the subject. Although the book is a biography of a `jobbing' chemist, and authoritative about chemistry, many of the group preferred the parts about people. However, we also noted that Levi is the central character through out, other characters tend to be significant only with respect to their relationship to Levi, not as characters in their own right.

Some members had an edition with an introductory chapter which discussed Levi's suicide. We were all shocked that he died in this way and we were aware of it as we read the book. Maybe knowing this was why some of us felt that the book was full of sense of foreboding. It is as much a retrospective story about the experience of Jewishness in the 20th century, as of being a chemist.



1 out of 5 stars wrong book   December 22, 2007
LEO DE CLERCQ (Antwerpen, Belgium)
1 out of 18 found this review helpful

This book with the title "The Periodic Table", "The best science book ever written" (comment by the London's Royal Institute) is completely misleading. If you are in search of a book explaining the periodic table, then this is NOT the one to buy. I couldn't care less about Primo Levi or the Jewish community in Piedmont. I'm returning this book! It's like buying a book called "The Christmas Cake, the ultimate cookery book" and ending up reading a story about sunny Africa. It goes into Room 101!


1 out of 5 stars Recommended for academic fairies.   October 26, 2007
G. E. Pen (Essex, England.)
1 out of 9 found this review helpful

The first few paragraphs seemed to cover a phenomenal sense of history, humanity and with beautiful prose, but the "Essential penguin" edition is printed with characters the size of one lead atom (or possibly 9pt type) and is subsequently unreadable.





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