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The Parrot's Theorem

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Country
  
France

Publication date
  
1998

Originally published
  
1998

Genre
  
Novel

Translator
  
Frank Wynne

3.6/5
Goodreads

Language
  
French

Published in English
  
15 June 2000

Author
  
Denis Guedj

Publisher
  
Weidenfeld & Nicolson

Published in english
  
15 June 2000

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Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Pages
  
416 pp (hardback edition)

Novels
  
The Indian Clerk, The Unvanquished, Blood Promise, Windswept House: A Vatican N, Kiln People

The Parrot's Theorem is a French novel written by Denis Guedj and published in 1998. An English translation was published in 2000.

Plot summary

The plot revolves around a household in Paris: Mr Ruche, an elderly wheelchair-using bookseller; his employee and housemate Perrette; and Perrette's three children - teenage twins and young Max who is deaf. Max liberates a talking parrot at the market and Mr Ruche receives a consignment of mathematical books from an old friend, who has lived in Brazil for decades without any contact between the two.

The household sets up its own exploration of mathematics in order to crack the code of the last messages from Mr Ruche's old friend, now apparently murdered. Mathematical topics covered in the book include primes and factors; irrational and amicable numbers; the discoveries of Pythagoras, Archimedes and Euclid; and the problems of squaring the circle and doubling the cube.

The mathematics is real mathematics, woven into an historical sequence as a series of intriguing problems, bringing their own stories with them.

References

The Parrot's Theorem Wikipedia