Mauve: How one man invented a colour that changed the world

Simon Garfield
3.67
1,876 ratings 185 reviews
1856. Eighteen-year-old chemistry student William Perkin's experiment has gone horribly wrong. But the deep brown sludge his botched project has produced has an unexpected power: the power to dye everything it touches a brilliant purple. Perkin has discovered mauve, the world's first synthetic dye, bridging a gap between pure chemistry and industry which will change the world forever. From the fetching ribbons soon tying back the hair on every fashionable head in London, to the laboratories in which scientists first scrutinized the human chromosome under the microscope, leading all the way to the development of modern vaccines against cancer and malaria, Simon Garfield's landmark work swirls together science and social history to tell the story of how one colour became a sensation.
Genres: HistoryNonfictionScienceArtBiographyMicrohistoryChemistryArt HistoryHistoricalHistory Of Science
251 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
449 (24%)
4 star
611 (33%)
3 star
608 (32%)
2 star
173 (9%)
1 star
35 (2%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Simon Garfield

Lists with this book

The Penelopiad
Life Of Pi
A Short History Of Myth
Canongate's "The Canons"
89 books5 voters