The Girl Who Loved Mathematics

Smithers Elizabeth | published 1988

added Sep 22, 2024
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First Date of Publication
1988
Original Source
New Women's Fiction
Additional Publication Information
Editor Aorewa Mcleaod
Medium
Short Story
Original Language
English
Kasman Review
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Not in ISFDB
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Summary: A sad tale of a college girl, Gilberte, who has a penchant for mathematics, a quality which she inherited from her father. Gilberte has thoughts of being with “someone quiet and dreamy, who will smile when you mention the pleasure of numbers. Someone from the same field to talk projective geometry with in the evenings". But she gets married to the first man she met at a dance, has five children, and ends up unning a fish and chip shop.

Story Tag Line: Coming soon.


Reviews

  • Vijay Fafat
    Published on

    A sad tale of a college girl, Gilberte, who has a penchant for mathematics, having inherited from her father “who was some high official who presumably dealt with estimates and figures”. In appearance, Gilberte “was tall and thin, like the irreducible first digit, unless you reduced it to fractions, those fey incomprehensible hieroglyphics that reminded me of freckles”. and then, “It wasn’t long before she outstripped her teachers in science and maths, and there was talk of allowing her to cycle to the Boys’ High School for the competition.”

    It becomes clear that Gilberte’s talents need to be honed in a university but “the attitude of Gilberte’s seemed to be that boys went to university if they were so inclined and girls were homemakers and married.” The school headmistress tries to reason with the father, to no avail, and in a comical turn, ends up slapping the father for his intransigence…

    Gilberte has thoughts of being with “someone quiet and dreamy, who will smile when you mention the pleasure of numbers. Someone in the same field to talk projective geometry with in the evenings.” Unfortunately, that was not to be. “She married the first man she met at a dance, had five children, and ran a fish and chip shop. At least she could add the numbers in her head.”