“The book under review is a collection of
biographies of hundreds of mathematicians, chronologically ordered by year of
birth. … The authors are to be commended for such a great work, which is
expected to be useful to a great number of readers. … Many readers will also
find the book pleasant to page through while relaxing, with a cup of coffee, in
an armchair.” (Mowaffaq Hajja, zbMATH, Vol. 1326.01001, 2016)
“Agarwal (Texas A&M Univ.–Kingsville) and Sen (GVP College of Engineering, India) begin their book with 36 pages of brief histories of arithmetic, astronomy, mathematical science, and computational science. Though each section is very succinct, all highlight the fundamental significance of the areas and give a sense of the development of the subject. … Summing Up: Recommended. General readers and lower-division undergraduates.”(R. L. Pour, Choice, Vol. 52 (10), June, 2015)
“This book wants to illustrate how mathematics has grown. … It contains all the information in one volume, not available elsewhere in this form. So it certainly deserves a place in a mathematics library. For those who explore the world from behind their computer, they can use the pdf version in which they can search electronically if they prefer that instead of paging through a hard copy book.” (Adhemar Bultheel, euro-math-soc.au, December, 2014)