Strange Attractors
Poems of Love and Mathematics
Joanne Growney editor Sarah Glaz editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Inc
Published:27th Oct '08
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Strange Attractors is a collection of approximately 150 poems with strong links to mathematics in content, form, or imagery. The common theme is love, and the editors draw from its various manifestations—romantic love, spiritual love, humorous love, love between parents and children, mathematicians in love, love of mathematics. The poets include literary masters as well as celebrated mathematicians and scientists.
"What, after all, is mathematics but the poetry of the mind, and what is poetry but the mathematics of the heart?" So wrote the American mathematician and educator David Eugene Smith. In a similar vein, the German mathematician Karl Weierstrass declared, "A mathematician who is not at the same time something of a poet will never be a full mathematician." Most mathematicians will know what they meant. But what do professional poets think of mathematics?
In this delightful collection, the editors present the view of the same terrain—the connections between mathematics and poetry—from the other side of the equation: the poets. Now is your chance to see if the equation balances.
—Keith Devlin, mathematician, Stanford University, and author of The Math Gene, The Math Instinct, and The Language of Mathematics
As the song states, ‘Love is a many-splendored thing.’ In this book, mathematics is splendored in many ways that demonstrate the breadth and depth of interest and joy that it presents to those who love it.
—Charles Ashbacher, Journal of Recreational Mathematics, April 2010
I recently acquired the book Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics. I’m crazy about the poems in it.
—JacketFlap.com, The Miss Rumphius Effect blog, April 2010
What a delighful collection! … The reader … does not need to know who Mandelbrot was, or how Venn diagrams work, or even the value of pi. She just has to understand that there is, at heart, a strong connection between math and poetry, and allow herself the pleasure of discovering how the two come together in these works.
—Wendy Galgan, Assisi Online Journal, April 2010
The editors did do a great job on the extras. I appreciate how they contextualized the book, offering a list of related books on mathematical poetry. And I frequently found myself consulting the author bios and publication information. If you are a mathematician who likes poetry, you are going to have a good time with this book. There’s some spectacular poetry here, and some actual math. It’s worth the dig.
—The College Math Journal, December 2009
The strength of this anthology is that it looks at what both poets and mathematicians build with each other’s tools. Sarah Glaz and JoAnne Growney have put together an anthology that readers with interests in either camp will enjoy and want to share.
—Poet’s Quarterly, October 2009
Among the delights of this book, in addition to the poetry, are a substantive introduction, bibliographical resources, information about the poet-contributors, and about the mathematicians who are named in poems. … Mathematicians and poetry lovers (with at least some feeling for math) will enjoy the many treasures in this anthology.
—Intelligencer, October 2009
How do I love this book? Let me count the ways … The intersection of mathematics and the arts is nonempty and this volume masterfully describes the contents of that intersection. … The authors have included notes about the contributors and information about the mathematicians who are mentioned. This latter feature makes the book even more appealing to a wider audience. … This wonderful volume could be used in a number of ways — supplemental reading in a history of mathematics course, reading in a poetry or literature course. Or just read it for fun.
—MAA Reviews, August 2009
… there are a priori grounds for thinking of poetry and mathematics together, as two rarefied forms of symbolic activity based on the power of the human mind to detect hidden analogies. In other words, an anthology like Strange Attractors, which brings together a hundred and fifty poems with some degree of mathematical content, makes more a priori sense than, say, a collection of famous speeches with some mathematical content. … There are no duds among the poems …
—J.M. Coetzee, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, August 2009
These poems articulate clearly and poetically thoughts and emotions informed by arithmetic. The attentive reader also learns some math. I had never really understood the concept of the asymptote until reading Elizabeth Anne Socolow’s ‘Asymptote’ … That is to say, I might have understood the concept intellectually, but not with any feeling. Now, I get it, not just in my head, but also in my gut. And I know from my colleagues in the math department who speak with such passion about their work, that it cannot be only mental. … The editors of this collection have gathered an astonishing plethora of poems — from Dante through Shakespeare to Carl Sandburg and Shel Silverstein — that draw upon the metaphorical richnesses of math to make their poems sing. … Poetry and math, we discover, are not antithetical, as we might have supposed, rather there is a great deal of commerce between them. This collection is satisfying, provocative and robust.
—Fredrerick Smock, Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, June 2009
Explorations of connections between mathematics and poetry recently brought two poets to the MAA’s Carriage House Conference Center for an evening of readings. … Many selections came from the anthology Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics. … The surprising interweavings of poetry and mathematics made for a delightful evening.
—MAA Online, April 2009 Listen to the event
Mathematics and love coupled in professor’s book of poetry: ‘Mathematics is much like art, Glaz says: ‘I love to teach and I love doing research in mathematics. I think that proving a theorem and writing a poem come from the same place.’
—UConn Advance, April 2009
Love and arithmetic. Well over one hundred poems, both past, classic, and contemporary, discuss these two subjects and how they have more in common than one would think. Strange Attractors is a fresh and original book of poetry, highly recommended.
—Library Bookwatch, March 2009
This international collection … can be recommended to every reader who loves poetry and mathematics and who wants to explore the way that mathematical ideas inhabit poetry.
—EMS Newsletter, March 2009
The combination of maths and love poetry might seem an odd mix. Despite loving maths myself, I was a little skeptical when I picked up this book … . I had no idea there would be so many poems suitable for such a collection, or that it would span so many centuries and include so many diverse contributors … not only can [this book] show people who are looking for poems to express love, the beauty of the language of maths, but it also might help explain some of the deep emotions mathematicians feel for their subject.
—Plus magazine, February 2009
It is a marvelous, lovely book.
—Zentralblatt MATH, February 2009
It would seem a tall order to be asked to compile a substantial collection of ’poems of love and mathematics.’ However this challenge has been successfully taken up by Sarah Glaz and JoAnne Growney
—The London Mathematical Society, February 2009
My Best Books of the Year 2008
… This book is a collection of poetry by everyone from the masters to people aspiring to be one. It is good for the soul.
—Charles Ashbacher, Journal of Object Technology, January 2009
… What a wonderful collection Strange Attractors is, offering readers—the ones who know mathematics is a form of poetry and the ones who don’t—a place to find, as Emily Dickinson says, what ‘eludes the finding out.’
—Robert Hass, author of Time and Materials, December 2008
As the song states, ‘Love is a many-splendored thing.’ In this book, mathematics is splendored in many ways that demonstrate the breadth and depth of interest and joy that it presents to those who love it.
—Charles Ashbacher, Journal of Recreational Mathematics, April 2010
I recently acquired the book Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics. I’m crazy about the poems in it.
—JacketFlap.com, The Miss Rumphius Effect blog, April 2010
What a delighful collection! … The reader … does not need to know who Mandelbrot was, or how Venn diagrams work, or even the value of pi. She just has to understand that there is, at heart, a strong connection between math and poetry, and allow herself the pleasure of discovering how the two come together in these works.
—Wendy Galgan, Assisi Online Journal, April 2010
The editors did do a great job on the extras. I appreciate how they contextualized the book, offering a list of related books on mathematical poetry. And I frequently found myself consulting the author bios and publication information. If you are a mathematician who likes poetry, you are going to have a good time with this book. There’s some spectacular poetry here, and some actual math. It’s worth the dig.
—The College Math Journal, December 2009
The strength of this anthology is that it looks at what both poets and mathematicians build with each other’s tools. Sarah Glaz and JoAnne Growney have put together an anthology that readers with interests in either camp will enjoy and want to share.
—Poet’s Quarterly, October 2009
Among the delights of this book, in addition to the poetry, are a substantive introduction, bibliographical resources, information about the poet-contributors, and about the mathematicians who are named in poems. … Mathematicians and poetry lovers (with at least some feeling for math) will enjoy the many treasures in this anthology.
—Intelligencer, October 2009
How do I love this book? Let me count the ways … The intersection of mathematics and the arts is nonempty and this volume masterfully describes the contents of that intersection. … The authors have included notes about the contributors and information about the mathematicians who are mentioned. This latter feature makes the book even more appealing to a wider audience. … This wonderful volume could be used in a number of ways — supplemental reading in a history of mathematics course, reading in a poetry or literature course. Or just read it for fun.
—MAA Reviews, August 2009
… there are a priori grounds for thinking of poetry and mathematics together, as two rarefied forms of symbolic activity based on the power of the human mind to detect hidden analogies. In other words, an anthology like Strange Attractors, which brings together a hundred and fifty poems with some degree of mathematical content, makes more a priori sense than, say, a collection of famous speeches with some mathematical content. … There are no duds among the poems …
—J.M. Coetzee, Notices of the American Mathematical Society, August 2009
These poems articulate clearly and poetically thoughts and emotions informed by arithmetic. The attentive reader also learns some math. I had never really understood the concept of the asymptote until reading Elizabeth Anne Socolow’s ‘Asymptote’ … That is to say, I might have understood the concept intellectually, but not with any feeling. Now, I get it, not just in my head, but also in my gut. And I know from my colleagues in the math department who speak with such passion about their work, that it cannot be only mental. … The editors of this collection have gathered an astonishing plethora of poems — from Dante through Shakespeare to Carl Sandburg and Shel Silverstein — that draw upon the metaphorical richnesses of math to make their poems sing. … Poetry and math, we discover, are not antithetical, as we might have supposed, rather there is a great deal of commerce between them. This collection is satisfying, provocative and robust.
—Fredrerick Smock, Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, June 2009
Explorations of connections between mathematics and poetry recently brought two poets to the MAA’s Carriage House Conference Center for an evening of readings. … Many selections came from the anthology Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics. … The surprising interweavings of poetry and mathematics made for a delightful evening.
—MAA Online, April 2009 Listen to the event
Mathematics and love coupled in professor’s book of poetry: ‘Mathematics is much like art, Glaz says: ‘I love to teach and I love doing research in mathematics. I think that proving a theorem and writing a poem come from the same place.’
—UConn Advance, April 2009
Love and arithmetic. Well over one hundred poems, both past, classic, and contemporary, discuss these two subjects and how they have more in common than one would think. Strange Attractors is a fresh and original book of poetry, highly recommended.
—Library Bookwatch, March 2009
This international collection … can be recommended to every reader who loves poetry and mathematics and who wants to explore the way that mathematical ideas inhabit poetry.
—EMS Newsletter, March 2009
The combination of maths and love poetry might seem an odd mix. Despite loving maths myself, I was a little skeptical when I picked up this book … . I had no idea there would be so many poems suitable for such a collection, or that it would span so many centuries and include so many diverse contributors … not only can [this book] show people who are looking for poems to express love, the beauty of the language of maths, but it also might help explain some of the deep emotions mathematicians feel for their subject.
—Plus magazine, February 2009
It is a marvelous, lovely book.
—Zentralblatt MATH, February 2009
It would seem a tall order to be asked to compile a substantial collection of ’poems of love and mathematics.’ However this challenge has been successfully taken up by Sarah Glaz and JoAnne Growney
—The London Mathematical Society, February 2009
My Best Books of the Year 2008
… This book is a collection of poetry by everyone from the masters to people aspiring to be one. It is good for the soul.
—Charles Ashbacher, Journal of Object Technology, January 2009
… What a wonderful collection Strange Attractors is, offering readers—the ones who know mathematics is a form of poetry and the ones who don’t—a place to find, as Emily Dickinson says, what ‘eludes the finding out.’
—Robert Hass, author of Time and Materials, December 2008
ISBN: 9781568813417
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 544g
250 pages