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In The Theory (Almost) of Everything, Kara Gnodde delivers a beautifully balanced story of family, logic, loss, and unexpected romance. After losing their parents, siblings Art and Mimi Brazertoni lean on each other for comfort and structure. Art, a mathematical genius, views the world through equations, probabilities, and functions. Mimi, in contrast, follows her heart — nurturing, emotional, seeking something beyond stability. When Mimi’s best friend urges her to open herself to love, she asks Art to help. Art agrees — but only if Mimi follows a strict mathematical principle in finding her partner.
Everything changes when Mimi meets Frank, also a mathematician. He’s spontaneous, charming, and seems to shatter all of Art’s equations. As Mimi’s heart begins to stir and Art’s logic is put to the test, the siblings must face what it means to risk vulnerability, what love asks of us, and whether some aspects of life are beyond calculation.
This 448‑page Ukrainian edition (Vivat, 2025; hardcover, approx. 197×127 mm) is ideal for readers who appreciate emotional resonance, thoughtful character development, and themes of family bonds, rationality versus emotion, and self‑discovery. For fans of romance with depth, literary drama, and stories that linger in the mind long after the last page.