Margins
The Organs of Sense book cover
The Organs of Sense
2019
First Published
3.77
Average Rating
240
Number of Pages

In 1666, an astronomer makes a prediction shared by no one else in the world: At the stroke of noon on June 30 of that year, a solar eclipse will cast all of Europe into total darkness for four seconds. This astronomer is rumored to be using the largest telescope ever built, but he is also known to be blind—both his eyes have been plucked out under mysterious circumstances. Is he mad? Or does he, despite this impairment, have an insight denied the other scholars of his day? These questions intrigue the young Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz—not yet the world-renowned polymath who would go on to discover calculus, but a nineteen-year-old whose faith in reason is shaky at best. Leibniz sets off to investigate the astronomer’s claim, and in the three hours before the eclipse occurs—or fails to occur—the astronomer tells the scholar the story behind his strange prediction: a tale that ends up encompassing kings and princes, family squabbles, insanity, art, loss, and the horrors of war. Acclaimed author Adam Ehrlich Sachs brings his unique comic and philosophical sensibilities to his first novel, The Organs of Sense, an intricate nested fable equating our inability to truly understand the world with our inability to understand our own messy families.

Avg Rating
3.77
Number of Ratings
568
5 STARS
31%
4 STARS
32%
3 STARS
24%
2 STARS
9%
1 STARS
4%
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Author

Adam Ehrlich Sachs
Adam Ehrlich Sachs
Author · 4 books
Adam Ehrlich Sachs is the author of The Organs of Sense and Inherited Disorders. His fiction has appeared in the New Yorker, n+1, and Harper's, and he was a 2018 NEA Literature Fellow. He lives in Pittsburgh.
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