![]() ![]() The historical version, such as it is, takes less than a tenth of the book, ending with Lovelace’s death from cancer at age 36, having written only one paper, while Babbage “never did finish any of his calculating machines. She was 18 when they met, the daughter of Lord Byron, steered toward mathematics and science in order to avoid the irrationality and even madness of poetry and, in her words from the novel, “redeem my father’s irrational legacy.” He was a 42-year-old mathematics professor, “a super-genius inventor” according to the narrative, committed to developing “the radical non-human calculating machine.” “In a sense the stubborn, rigid Babbage and mercurial, airy Lovelace embody the division between hardware and software,” explains one of the voluminous footnotes (and endnotes) that take even more space than the graphic narrative. This graphic novel, written and illustrated by an artist and computer animator, begins with a sliver of fact-the brief, apparently unproductive “intellectual partnership” between Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage. An audaciously imagined alternate history of the invention of the computer-in 19th-century Victorian England. ![]()
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