About a month ago, I noted that Thomas Levenson’s book Newton and the Counterfeiter (2009) is now available:

The book is the story of how the great scientist Isaac Newton, after making the discoveries which electrified the scientific world, took a job as the Warden of the Royal Mint, an official charged with protecting the nation’s currency. In this role, he came into contact, and conflict, with a criminal mastermind and counterfeiter William Chalconer, and the two would play a game of cat-and-mouse with life literally at stake.
When I’ve told people about this book, they ask, “For real?” They naturally assume that the book is historical fiction, but it is in fact a true story!
I bought the book immediately, but didn’t read and review it right away: I figured that a book with such subject matter would naturally be an instant hit! But as Tom Levenson noted on his own blog, the book has not gotten the publicity it needs (I would say deserves), so I thought I’d do my own part to draw people’s attention to it.
It deserves your attention, too: if you’re a fan of history, a fan of science, a fan of true crime stories, a fan of economics, or just interested in reading a good, true, tale, Newton and the Counterfeiter is well worth your time.
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